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Focusing on Stewardship for Long-term Sustainability

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Focusing on Stewardship for Long-term Sustainability Developed by: Cinda Williams, University of Idaho Extension Kevin Laughlin, University of Idaho Extension – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Focusing on Stewardship for Long-term Sustainability


1
Focusing on Stewardship for Long-term
Sustainability
  • Developed by
  • Cinda Williams, University of Idaho Extension
  • Kevin Laughlin, University of Idaho Extension
  • Susan Donaldson, University of Nevada Cooperative
    Extension

Univ. of Idaho Extension
2
Topics to be covered
  • The whole-property concept
  • Integrating the lessons youve learned
  • Viewing your property through a sustainability
    lens
  • How others are making it work
  • Monitoring and assessing progress
  • How youre making it work

3
What is sustainability?
  • According to the U.S. EPA, sustainability means
    meeting the needs of the present without
    compromising the ability of future generations to
    meet their own needs.

4
What about sustainable agriculture?
  • According to SARE, sustainable agriculture
    involves farming systems that are profitable,
    environmentally sound and good for people and
    communities.
  • They must be
  • Economically sustainable
  • Environmentally sustainable
  • Socially sustainable

USDA NRCS
5
So you want to be a steward of your land?
  • Steward a person who manages another's property
    or financial affairs
  • Environmental stewardship the responsibility to
    take care of our natural resources to ensure they
    are sustainably managed for current and future
    generations

6
What does it mean to be a steward of a
small-acreage property?
  • The practice of carefully managing land usage
    to ensure natural systems are maintained or
    enhanced for future generations.
  • -The Land Stewardship Center

USDA NRCS
7
Guiding principles of land stewardship
  • Caring for the system as a whole
  • Conserving resources
  • Maintaining, building and enhancing stability in
    nature
  • Honoring cultural values and ethics

8
Putting it all together with a whole-property
perspective
  • Use what youve learned about
  • Inventory and goals
  • Soils
  • Water
  • Wildfire threat reduction
  • Plants
  • Animals
  • Enterprises

9
The whole-farm or whole-property view
Redrawn by A. Miller from www.sare.org
10
Applying a systems approach
  • System a group of interacting, interdependent
    elements that function together as a complex
    unified whole

www.unesco.org
11
(No Transcript)
12
Whole-farm nutrient balance
www.extension.org/pages/Whole_Farm_Nutrient_Balanc
e
13
An alternate view of the whole-farm nutrient
balance
14
Applying systems thinking to your property
  • What are the components of your system?
  • How are they interrelated?
  • How does an action on one component affect other
    parts of your system?

15
Systems diagram activity
www.icra-edu.org
16
A systems thinker
  • Seeks to understand the big picture
  • Observes how elements within systems change over
    time, generating patterns and trends

17
Being a systems thinker
  • Changes perspectives
  • Identifies the circular nature of complex cause-
    and-effect relationships, i.e. interdependencies

18
Developing your goals with sustainability in mind
  • Environmental concerns
  • Economic factors
  • Social issues

www.sare.org
19
Putting sustainable goals into action
20
Putting sustainable goals into action
21
Putting sustainable goals into action
22
Make your own goals!
23
The living soil
  • How do the practices we employ on our land
    influence the soil?

USDA NRCS
24
Improving soil quality
  • Work on the basics of high-quality soils
  • Reduce tillage
  • Add organic matter (plant cover crops)
  • Reduce applications of synthetic-based chemicals

25
Assess your soil quality
  • Monitor for
  • Earthworms
  • Organic matter color, roots and residues
  • Subsurface compaction
  • Soil tilth
  • Erosion
  • Water-holding capacity
  • Drainage and infiltration
  • Crop condition
  • pH
  • Nutrient-holding capacity

26
Protecting our water
  • Water quantity
  • Reduce unnecessary water loss by covering soil
    (cover crops, mulch, etc.)
  • Increase water-use efficiency by proper
    irrigation
  • Water quality
  • Prevent runoff of soil into water bodies
  • Prevent contamination by livestock by installing
    buffers or providing off-stream watering

USDA NRCS
energyfarms,.net
USDA NRCS
USDA NRCS
27
What are you doing to conserve water?
  • For your crops or pasture?
  • For your animals?
  • In your landscape?
  • In your home?

NDEP
28
Sustainable water use
  • Build well-structured soils that retain water
  • Design for infiltration of water, rather than
    runoff
  • Plant species that are drought-tolerant and
    disease-resistant
  • Capture, conserve and recycle water

29
(No Transcript)
30
What about floods?
The bright green color indicates flood warnings.
31
How would drought or a flood affect you?
  • In the short term?
  • In the midterm (3 years)?
  • In the long term (5 years)?
  • What is your contingency plan?
  • What will you do differently?

32
Protecting and preserving your space
Was wildfire part of your long-term plan?
Make a plan for protecting and preserving your
space
33
Managing plants for sustainability
  • Promote ecological balance with plant diversity
  • Maintain vegetative cover
  • Enhance or provide organic matter
  • Enhance nutrient recycling
  • Promote pest population balance through
    biological strategies

34
Raising healthy animals a systems approach
  • You can manage parts of the system to decrease
    internal parasites and their effects

35
Managing energy use
  • Make use of renewable energy
  • Solar
  • Pumps for watering and irrigation
  • Greenhouses
  • Wind
  • Electricity for buildings
  • Biofuels
  • Oils or fuel from plants
  • Energy from animal waste (which is not a waste
    after all!)
  • Methane digesters

36
Creating successful enterprises
  • Choose your production system
  • Develop your niche
  • Your uniqueness is the key
  • Tell your story!
  • Value-added products
  • Connect to customers and the community
  • Understand the bottom line

37
Quality lives
  • For you and your family
  • Physical health exposure and safety
  • Mental health stress and depression
  • For employees
  • Fair treatment
  • Decent wages and living conditions
  • For animals
  • Humane treatment of animals
  • Low-stress handling

USDA NRCS
38
Vibrant communities
  • Links between the landowner or farmer and the
    community
  • Networking
  • Partnerships and collaboration
  • Lifelong learning

39
Vibrant communities
  • What can you do?
  • Host public and school tours
  • Share what youve learned
  • Donate food to local food banks
  • Buy fresh and buy local
  • Join a co-op or support group
  • What ideas do you have?

40
How are others making it work?
  • Lets focus on systems sustainability by looking
    at some examples of people who have made a
    difference in the sustainability of land, soil,
    water, plants, animals, etc.

41
The Mestres property, Nevada
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
42
S. Mestre, Reno, Nev.
43
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
44
S. Mestre, Reno, Nev.
45
S. Mestre, Reno, Nev.
46
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
47
UNCE, Reno, Nev.
48
S. Mestre, Reno, Nev.
49
S. Mestre, Reno, Nev.
50
S. Mestre, Reno, Nev.
51
Stewardship by the Mestres
  • Protecting ground and surface water resources
  • Conserving water
  • Stabilizing, amending, and covering soil to
    increase organic matter and moisture content and
    decrease erosion
  • Improved vegetative cover and better management
    of grassy areas

52
Calypso Farm and Ecology Center Ester, Alaska
  • Issues
  • Difficult climate long winters, short extreme
    summers with long days
  • Poor soils not very fertile, permafrost only a
    few inches below the surface

53
Goals
  • Establish an organic vegetable, herb and flower
    operation
  • Use it as a method to educate others about
    environmental issues and homegrown food

54
The enterprise
  • CSA with a 16- to 20-week season
  • Organic herbs, vegetables and cut flowers
  • Grown on 2.5 terraced acres amended with organic
    products including composted leaves, hay and
    manure, lawn clippings, etc.

55
Elements of sustainability
  • Majority of 30 acres are not disturbed and kept
    forested
  • Trees are used as lumber
  • Soil is kept covered and amended, so moisture
    retention is improved
  • Rainwater is collected from roofs and used to
    irrigate crops and for firefighter exercises
  • Local community is educated

56
Fostering awareness in young people
  • Host field trips for schools
  • Encourage students to participate in the farm
  • Create school gardens

57
Monitor and assess your progress
  • Before you took this class, how were you
    interacting with your resources?
  • What are you doing differently now?
  • What do you plan to do differently in the future?

58
Monitor and assess your progress
  • What results do you want? How will you achieve
    your goals?
  • How will you know if you succeeded?
  • How are you making progress toward making your
    property more sustainable?

59
Where can you continue to get help?
  • SARE www.sare.org
  • ATTRA www.attra.org
  • Educational organizations
  • Universities
  • Cooperative Extension
  • Community colleges
  • Nonprofits

60
Where can you continue to get help?
  • Regulatory agencies
  • Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)
  • conservation districts
  • state forestry
  • Networks (local, state and regional)

61
Where can you get funding?
  • State and private forestry
  • Stewardship incentive programs
  • USDA/NRCS incentive programs, such as
    Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP),
    Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP) and
    Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)
  • Water quality and watershed programs

62
Summary
  • What do sustainability and stewardship mean to
    you?
  • How will you be a better steward?
  • How can you help your neighbors become better
    stewards?
  • How does systems thinking help you achieve your
    goals?

63
Participant presentations
64
How are YOU making it work?
  • How are you integrating what youve learned about
    your resources?
  • How have you affected your own property?
  • How have you affected your community?

65
  • Have your long-term goals changed? Why?
  • What do you hope to accomplish?
  • How will your property be more sustainable?
  • Are you a better steward?

USDA NRCS
66
  • Youre on your way to a sustainable approach to
    managing all the resources on your small-acreage
    property!

UNCE, Reno, NV
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