Grazing School A Success - Press Release, 2003
Media advisory issued October 10, 2003, effective immediately.
For media inquiries, contact Caroline Booth Lara, Communications Specialist, (580)
224-6379.
email: cblara@noble.org.
Foundation's Grazing School a Success
ARDMORE, Okla. The Noble Foundation's first public Grazing School brought
participants from around the country together for four days of hands-on field
exercises and expert classroom teaching. From grass mechanics to grazing systems
to drought management, participants learned how to make the most of their forage
resources.One challenge the Noble Foundation's agricultural specialists faced
was addressing the wide range of situations represented by the school's participants.
"Each operation is different, and there's also variation within a single
operation," said James Rogers, one of the Foundation's forage specialists.
"We try to point out the differences we get them to look at current
production and then look at where they can go."
Wendell Black, a life-long agricultural producer from Atwood, Okla., and a
Foundation cooperator, appreciated the integrated approach of the school.
"The specialists have covered it all, from the best pastures to the poorest,"
Black said. "What they have said can be applied to whatever situation you're
in."
A unique feature of the school was the field exercises, which involved groups
of participants estimating the forage demand of a small herd.
"The grazing exercises were helpful, they allowed us to see where the
rubber meets the road," said Brock Merritt of Hillsboro, Texas, who recently
returned to the agriculture industry and is interested in starting a custom-grazed
stocker operation. "It's good to hear someone else's perspective, and you
got that in the groups. I feel like I can adapt other people's ideas into my
operation."
Though the hands-on activities were popular, attendees enjoyed the classroom
time, too.
"If a presentation is over everyone's head, it's not worth anything,"
Black said. "The Grazing School information is presented where everyone
can comprehend it."
Forage specialist Rogers summed up the school with this comment: "We want
producers to understand that they are managing a resource with their forages,
and that proper management is vital in the long term."
Plans are underway for the 2004 Grazing School next fall. For more information,
call the Foundation at (580) 223-5810.
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Photo cutline: Noble Foundation forage specialist Matt Mattox visits
with a Grazing School participant while groups work on field exercises at the
Foundation's campus in Ardmore, Okla.
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The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, headquartered in Ardmore, Okla., is a
non-profit organization conducting agricultural, forage improvement, and plant
biology research; providing grants to numerous non-profit charitable, educational
and health organizations; and assisting farmers and ranchers through educational
and consultative agricultural programs.
To learn more, visit the Noble Foundation Web site at http://www.noble.org.
More news releases available at www.noble.org/Press_Release
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