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Cooperative Conservation Improves Nevada Rangeland
rancher Agee Smith, co-owner of Cottonwood Ranch, worked with a resource
management group assisted by NRCS to develop and enact a holistic plan
that has improved the range and raised ranch profits (photo by Mona
Whalen) |
In an evolving project that truly demonstrates cooperative conservation, Nevada
ranchers and Federal and State wildlife, forestry and rangeland conservation
specialists are collaborating on an innovative team approach to manage sensitive
habitats on public land. The team, assisted by NRCS rangeland management
specialist Chuck Petersen, helped resolve an impasse between the Cottonwood
Ranch owners and Federal agencies by developing and enacting a holistic plan
that has improved the range, raised ranch profits, and brought new voices to the
table.
“Federal land management activities are sensitive, and in northeast Nevada
there’s a history of skepticism by landowners,” said Petersen, NRCS range
specialist in Elko, Nevada, who now facilitates the group. The collaborative
working group first formed in 1995 to help resolve a disagreement between the
Smith family, owners of Cottonwood Ranch, and the Bureau of Land Management
(BLM) and U.S. Forest Service (USFS) over cattle carrying capacity. The Smiths
had permits to run their cattle on 34,000 acres in a remote area in and near the
Jarbidge Mountains.
The team, which calls itself the Shoesole Resource Management Group (after an
old ranch brand), was launched with support from a
SARE professional development grant,
and the Smith family was profiled in the SARE-supported book,
The New American Farmer, 2nd
edition.
After evaluating the conditions of the natural resources on the 34,000-acre
rangeland, the Federal agencies wanted to cut cattle numbers. The news was a
blow to the Smith family, which was struggling financially through the 1980s. In
response, Agee Smith, Cottonwood Ranch general manager, educated himself in
Holistic Management® (HM), which asks students to take a whole-system view of
their businesses. Many ranchers embrace HM because it encompasses setting goals
– from family roles to environmental conservation strategies to profit
enhancement – and defining clear methods to achieve those goals.
“At the classes, we heard how cattle don’t have to be abusers of the land,”
Smith said. “They can be used to rehabilitate the land. That was a totally novel
concept that was very exciting and changed my perception of how I look at this
animal on the land.”
The new way of thinking paid off for the Smiths. HM helped them prioritize
family members’ roles, and they launched new agri-tourism enterprises that bring
paying guests to the ranch to enjoy hunting, riding, cattle-herding, and other
recreational activities. Today, 50 percent of Cottonwood Ranch’s income comes
from tourism.
To meet a goal to improve the rangeland, the Smiths initiated
management-intensive grazing, in which the herd is moved frequently through the
range based on monitoring. The family’s range management plan is guided by the
Shoesole Resource Management Group’s holistic management team.
With the team’s input, the family has overhauled its approach to range
management, resulting in what Petersen calls tremendous improvements to riparian
and upland areas, including better water quality in streams and more plentiful
herbaceous and woody vegetative ground cover. The improvements convinced
officials at the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the U.S. Forest Service
(USFS) to allow about 400 cow/calf pairs on the landscape.
“Team members collect and evaluate riparian monitoring data, and improvements
are definitely being made,” Petersen said. “The agencies concur and they’re
satisfied with the progress.”
Cottonwood Ranch has become an educational resource for agency staff as well as
other ranchers. Each summer, the team organizes a field tour featuring a
specific habitat management strategy. Team participants from Nevada
Extension developed a fact sheet evaluating the effects of HM on the landscape.
Finally, part of the group’s recent efforts have focused on public relations and
focusing on the collaborative decision making process in hopes that educating
Nevada residents about the ranch’s progress and the group’s partnership approach
will avoid citizen appeals to the BLM and the USFS about the Smiths’ grazing
allotments.
“We want to solve problems,” Petersen said. “We’ve combined our working group
concept – a multi-agency and public-represented group, with all affected
interests invited – with Holistic Management® to guide the group dynamic. We
look at the whole operation and what kind of impact it has on private and public
land, ranch profitability and quality of life.”
About SARE
Since 1988, SARE has helped advance farming systems that are profitable, environmentally sound
and good for communities through a nationwide grants program. The program,
administered by CSREES and
USDA, funds projects and conducts outreach designed to improve
agricultural systems and natural resources.
NRCS field office professionals frequently collaborate on SARE-funded projects
and are valuable partners to the SARE program. NRCS staff serve on SARE’s
national Operations Committee, on regional Administrative Councils, on State
committees and are actively engaged as technical advisers and collaborators on
SARE-funded research grants around the U.S.
For more information, visit
the SARE website or for more information about the regional SARE programs, click on the region
area of the map below.
Your contact is Diana Friedman, SARE
research associate, at 301-504-6422.
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