Conservation Agriculture Systems Innovation
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Conservation Agriculture Systems Innovation

Conservation agriculture news

Sano Farms farm visit June 24, 2016

Audience in attendance on June 23 to see work being done at Sano Farms.
The last in a series of five farm visits highlighting soil health goals and the variety of ways in which these goals are being realized at farms throughout the Central Valley took place at Sano Farms in Firebaugh, CA on Friday, June 24th with about forty attendees.  Farm owner, Alan Sano, and farm manager, Jesse Sanchez, provided a very detailed and informative overview of the practices, equipment and principles that are being used at Sano Farms  now for over ten years.  These practices include the use of winter cover crop mixtures, reduced disturbance tillage that relies on the use of a cover crop roller, a chopper and a bed shaper, and subsurface drip irrigation.  Benefits that have resulted from these practices include improved soil function in terms of water movement and storage, reduced costs related to tillage, and the ability to reduce fertilizer inputs while keeping high yields and crop quality. 

Together, the practices that are now successfully employed by Sano and Sanchez, not only cut production costs, but they also reduce GHG emissions through the use of less tillage and tractor passes through the field, and they also build soil C and N, thereby removing these elements from the atmosphere and storing them in the soil.

A video summarizing the farm visit at Sano Farms is available at the You Tube link below.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVd3wKF3P6fA4zQWVKIouWA

 



Posted on Monday, June 27, 2016 at 8:55 AM

UCCE Master Gardeners of El Dorado County focus on conservation agriculture

Master Gardeners of El Dorado County

About 80 Master Gardeners of the UCCE group in El Dorado County came together to learn about the principles and practices of conservation agriculture in a lively discussion with CASI Workgroup Chair, Jeff Mitchell, on June 23rd at the group's monthly meeting in Placerville.  The meeting was organized by Master Gardener event coordinator, Catherine Mone, and drew a very animated and engaged group of participants.

Mitchell talked about the core principles of conservation agriculture and the extent to which they're now being used around the world and recently in California.  He showcased examples of pioneering innovation that have been achieved in a number of cropping contexts and also provided information and ideas as to why it will be increasingly likely that these sorts of production system options may have greater receptivity and resonance in California in the future.  He ended his discussion with some examples of motivation that he has benefited from over the years from his professional mentor, Dwayne Beck of South Dakota State University.  "Take the E out of ET and the T out of can't," was Beck's encouragement to Mitchell.  This can be accomplished by protecting the soil surface with crop residues that cool soil temperatures and reduce soil water evaporation, and by not giving in to merely accepting the status quo, but by identifying bold, ambitious, and long-term cropping system goals and then coming up with the ways to achieve them.  This is, according to Beck, "Nothing short of the agronomic and ecological equivalent of the space race back in the 1960's" and we are going to need to really dedicate tremendous creativity and effort toward achieving it.

CASI was very honored to be invited by the Master Gardeners of El Dorado County and we look forward to returning to Placerville in late September!



Posted on Monday, June 27, 2016 at 8:43 AM

California Farm Demonstration Network

Wednesday, June 15th, 2016

10:00 AM 

T & D Willey Farms, Madera, CA

The fourth in our series of five farm visits that are part of the California Farm Demonstration Network will be taking place this Wednesday, June 15th, beginning at 10:00 AM and winding up at about 11:45 AM at the farm of Tom and Denesse Willey at the southwest corner of the intersection of Road 20 and Avenue 14 about five miles west of the town of Madera, CA.  As with each of the other farm visits that are being hosted during May and June by a variety of farmers in the San Joaquin Valley, the visit with Tom Willey will focus on his long-term goals for soil health and the practices that he uses to achieve those goals.  Participants will have an opportunity to learn what Tom has been doing at T & D Willey Farms over the years and what he has learned as a result of his soil care practices.  In addition, we will all also have an opportunity to contribute to some actual data collection following Tom's introductory discussion that will be part of the discovery process of the farm demonstration network and that will serve as baseline information for future comparisons and monitoring. 

If anyone is leaving the Davis, CA to come to the event and is interested in carpooling, please contact Jessica Rudnick at jrudnick@ucdavis.edu.

JM 2016 FmDmo-2
JM 2016 FmDmo-2

Posted on Monday, June 13, 2016 at 8:31 AM

CASI on the Radio

CASI chair Jeff Mitchell discusses recent work that was done to evaluate the potential for using precision overhead irrigation for a variety of crops in California's San Joaquin Valley. This audio clip provides the interview that AM650 KSTE Radio's Farmer Fred Hoffman conducted with Mitchell, which aired on Sunday, June 5, on the Sacramento radio program.  In the clip, Mitchell provides a summary of research and recent experiences that were recently reported in the University's quarterly research journal, California Agriculture.

Click here to listen to the interview.

CASI's Eric Kueneman, formerly the director of Conservation Agriculture international programs on conservation agriculture, is interviewed by KSTE Radio's Farmer Fred Hoffman about conservation agriculture in California. This interview aired on Sunday, June 5, on Cap Radio 650 AM KSTE and provides a summary of the Outlook article that Kueneman and 28 other CASI members prepared for the most recent issue of the University's quarterly research journal, California Agriculture.

Click here to listen to the interview.

 

KMJ Radio with Don York
A radio interview about the June 9 California Farm Demonstration Network's farm visit at Triple C's Farm in Denair, Calif., aired on Don York's morning Ag Report on KMJ580 AM out of Fresno on June 8.  This interview provided background information related to the goals of the farm demonstration network and what participants will learn at this farm about how no-tillage and precision overhead irrigation are being used with interesting improvements in soil function.

http://casi.ucanr.edu/Video_updates/Radio_updates/

 

Posted on Tuesday, June 7, 2016 at 10:03 AM

Formation of California Farm Demonstration Evaluation Network

We would like to let you know about the formation of the California Farm Demonstration Evaluation Network, - a grassroots, locally-based effort that has been developed by farmers throughout the State, the Conservation Agriculture Systems Innovation (CASI) Center, the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, the California Association of Resource Conservation Districts, the University of California Cooperative Extension, and a variety of private sector partners to address the simultaneous goals of better farm management, greater farm profits, and increased farm productivity and sustainability. 

The California network is modeled after a number of other farm networks that have been created in several states around the country as a means for providing opportunities for progress, the development of improved systems, and greater efficiency in face of the many challenges that agriculture faces today.  Key elements of the California farm demonstration network are 1) participatory learning and adaptive, improved management based on sound science- and experience-based principles, 2) the public, voluntary showcasing of innovative systems developed by experienced farmer leaders, 3) a program of farm demonstration evaluations that employ monitoring, data collection, and analysis of findings, and 4) the use of proven, creative methods for sharing, discussion and communicating results and findings so as to scale up broader adoption of improved systems. 

The network has a broad array of goals that it is pursuing that include the development of water-, climate-, and nutrient-smart systems for the State's diverse crop production environments.  An initial series of network-sponsored farm visits that showcase innovative soil health practices of five Central Valley farmers is being conducted in June of 2016. 

Information for these visits and for ongoing activities and opportunities of the network is available at the CASI website http://casi.ucanr.edu/ or by emailing or calling, Jeff Mitchell, CASI Workgroup Chair, at jpmitchell@ucdavis.edu or (559) 303-9689.

 

Posted on Monday, June 6, 2016 at 8:32 AM

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