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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 Susan Donaldson, University of Nevada Cooperative Extension. Univ. of Idaho Extension. Topics to be covered:.
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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 Susan Donaldson, University of Nevada Cooperative Extension Univ. of Idaho Extension
Topics to be covered: • The whole-property concept • Integrating the lessons you’ve learned • Viewing your property through a sustainability lens • How others are making it work • Monitoring and assessing progress • How you’re making it work
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.”
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
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
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
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
Putting it all together with a whole-property perspective Use what you’ve learned about: • Inventory and goals • Soils • Water • Wildfire threat reduction • Plants • Animals • Enterprises
The whole-farm or whole-property view Redrawn by A. Miller from www.sare.org
Applying a “systems” approach • System: a group of interacting, interdependent elements that function together as a complex unified whole www.unesco.org
Whole-farm nutrient balance www.extension.org/pages/Whole_Farm_Nutrient_Balance
Inputs Feed Animals Irrigation water Fertilizer Legume N Managed outputs Meat and milk Crops Manure Feed Manure Farm boundary Losses or soil storage Livestock and Poultry Environmental Stweardship An alternate view of the whole-farm nutrient balance
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?
Systems diagram activity www.icra-edu.org
A systems thinker: • Seeks to understand the big picture • Observes how elements within systems change over time, generating patterns and trends
Being a systems thinker • Identifies the circular nature of complex cause- and-effect relationships, i.e. interdependencies • Changes perspectives
Developing your goals with sustainability in mind • Environmental concerns • Economic factors • Social issues www.sare.org
The living soil • How do the practices we employ on our land influence the soil? USDA NRCS
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
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
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
What are you doing to conserve water? • For your crops or pasture? • For your animals? • In your landscape? • In your home? NDEP
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
What about floods? The bright green color indicates flood warnings.
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?
Protecting and preserving your space Was wildfire part of your long-term plan? Make a plan for protecting and preserving your space
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
Pasture rotation ATTRA Raising healthy animals – a systems approach You can manage parts of the system to decrease internal parasites and their effects
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
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
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
Vibrant communities • Links between the landowner or farmer and the community • Networking • Partnerships and collaboration • Lifelong learning
Vibrant communities • What can you do? • Host public and school tours • Share what you’ve learned • Donate food to local food banks • Buy fresh and buy local • Join a co-op or support group What ideas do you have?
How are others making it work? • Let’s 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.
The Mestre’s property, Nevada UNCE, Reno, Nev. UNCE, Reno, Nev.