FREE program focuses on conservation and land management for female landowners

Small Towns
Contact(s)

Rhea Landholm, brand marketing and communications manager, rheal@cfra.org or 402.687.2100 ext. 1025

Lyons, NE - Women who own or manage farmland or ranchland in Holt and surrounding counties in Nebraska are invited to participate in a  Women Caring for the Land discussion about soil health, farm conservation options, and available resources. The free program will take place on Tuesday, March 15 at the Holt County Economic Development Office (historic depot building) in O’Neill, NE.

“Women own almost a third of farm and ranch land in Nebraska, and often want to do more to conserve their land and resources. However, many are unsure exactly how to reach their conservation goals and what resources are available to help them. Women Caring for the Land can help,” said Traci Bruckner with the Center for Rural Affairs.
 
According to Bruckner, Women Caring for the Land offers a peer-to-peer, informal discussion format to allow women landowners to talk about their individual land stewardship goals, facilitated by women conservation experts who can share resources available such as USDA conservation programs, state loans, and other tools.
 
The meeting will begin with registration, coffee and resource sharing at 8:30 a.m.  A free lunch will be provided, and during an afternoon field tour participants will travel to a nearby location to observe soil characteristics and conservation practices. The tests will measure for soil structure and stability and infiltration.
 
Bruckner suggests participants wear appropriate clothing and footwear/attire as walking a short distance will be required for the field tour.  The group will return to the depot for dessert and wrap-up, with the meeting ending by 3 p.m.
 
For those interested, immediately following the workshop, Marian Langan, the Executive Director of Audubon Nebraska, will provide a short 30 minute presentation on managing and conserving habitat for grassland birds.
 
Maintaining healthy soil is the key to productivity and environmental health for farmland. Women landowners who attend this meeting will learn to assess and improve the health of their soils through cover crops, no-till and strip-till, and other conservation practices.
 
Bruckner also pointed out that all interested women are welcome to these discussions, including owners, operators and inheritors of farmland, regardless of their degree of knowledge regarding conservation.
 
Event Location Details:
Women Caring for the Land Workshop
Tuesday, March 15
8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Holt County Economic Development Office
429 4th St, O’Neill, NE 68763
 
*FREE lunch provided

This session of Women Caring for the Land is sponsored by the Center for Rural Affairs in partnership with the Women, Food and Agriculture Network, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service. The series is funded by a grant from the USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service Conservation Innovation Grant Program.