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Conservation Showcase

The following documents require Adobe Acrobat.

Picture of KOAT-TV filming a Trigo fire area
A Story Inside An EWP Story

Knowing a sleepy little stream could turn into a roaring monster following the Trigo Fire motivated Natural Resources Conservation Service employees, with permission from owners of a camp, to develop a plan to protect structures and possible lives of campers in bunkhouses.

A Story Inside An EWP Story (PDF; 860 KB)
 

Picture of knapweed
SWCD and RC&D Team to Fight Noxious Weeds

The Tierra y Montes Soil & Water Conservation District and Adelante Resource Conservation & Development Council in Las Vegas, New Mexico teamed up to attach their noxious weed infestations.

SWCD and RC&D Team to Fight Noxious Weeds (PDF; 604 KB)
 

Picture of rancher providing hands-on demostrations of soil sampling
Role of Soil Health Promoted

Continued success in agriculture is dependent upon the ability to maintain soil health and manage water resources through conservation planning, according to New Mexico NRCS agronomists, water quality specialist, and soil scientists.  And, they are out to increase understanding of the role conservation planning plays in the maintenance and improvement of soil health.

Role of Soil Health Promoted (PDF; 579 KB)
 

Picture of NM NRCS state conservationist, NRCS chief and beginning rancher
Beginning Rancher Achieves in Bootheel

sometimes it is hard to decide what approach to take when writing a conservation success story.  That is true for the Kanzas Massey story.  Should it be about how her success is "All in the Family" or "Conservation Fits Ranching Operation Like a Hand in a Glove?"  In Massey's case, both approaches are true.

Beginning Rancher Achieves in Bootheel (PDF; 811 KB)
 

Photograph of Vine Mesquite
Being Kind is Not Always the Answer

Being too kind is not the answer sometimes – as the Los Lunas Plant Material Center has learned in its efforts to produce vine mesquite for riparian restoration uses.

Being Kind is Not Always the Answer (PDF; 532 KB)
 

Dave Dreeson of the PMC Welcoming Jeremy Pinto
Tribes, Pueblos Explore Native Plants

NRCS New Mexico’s Plant Materials Center in Los Lunas is an incubator for native plant technology for a wide variety of farmers, ranchers, and industries – and recently had the opportunity to showcase some of its work to the Intertribal Nursery Council.

Tribes, Pueblos Explore Native Plants (PDF; 780 KB)
 

Photograph of Hands Holding Soil Sample
Conservation Innovation Grant Researches Soil Moisture Issues

Water is a key ingredient in New Mexico’s economic development – and a Conservation Innovation Grant (CIG) experiment in the Burro Mountains is just one of the state’s many NRCS supported projects to help watersheds yield more of this precious resource.

Conservation Innovation Grant Researches Soil Moisture Issues (PDF; 446 KB)
 

mesquite
Big Problems Get Big Solutions

Take miles of New Mexico mesquite and counter them with a watershed initiative, and you have the Lovington Field Office working at its best.  In 2007 NRCS New Mexico challenged its field offices to devote funding on a landscape or watershed scale, and it would match dollar-for-dollar monies that were set aside for such purposes.  The Lovington Field Office along with the Portales Field Office, and its locally-led work groups, accepted the challenge and set aside funds to manage brush in the Lost Draw Area.  These funds were matched by the NRCS New Mexico State Office under the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP).

Big Problems Get Big Solutions (PDF; 687 KB)
 

Forest before and after thinning
Ciudad SWCD Takes Healthy Watershed Mission to Heart

To ensure healthy watersheds in New Mexico it takes public landowners, private landowners, Natural Resources Conservation Service, soil and water conservation districts, State Forestry, private non-profits, other federal and state agencies, and a whole cadre of individuals and organizations to make it happen.  And, the Ciudad Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD) is taking this mission to ehart in the east mountain communities of Bernalillo county with healthy forest funding provided by the U.S. Forest Service and administered by the New Mexico State Forestry.

Ciudad SWCD Takes Health Watershed Mission to Heart (PDF; 406 KB)
 

Photograph of Kenneth Walker, East Area Conservationist
NM NRCS Program to Protect Expiring CRP Acres

Pressures such as higher commodity prices are being placed on producers to take Conservation Program (CRP) fields out of grass and put back into production.  The New Mexico NRCS is taking an innovative approach to stem the flow of CRP fields going back into crop production, which at the same time helping ranchers by using Farm Bill programs not normally associated with CRP.

NM NRCS Program to Protect Expiring CRP Acres (PDF; 324 KB)
 

Photograph of a Lesser Prairie Chicken
What's Good for the Prairie Chicken is Good for Cattle

The grasslands that the Lesser Prairie Chicken needs, also responds to Causey rancher Jim Weaver's goal of developing wildlife habitat while operating an economically viable ranch.  Cattle thrive in the wide open spaces that meet the Lesser Prairie Chicken's requirements.

What's Good for the Prairie Chicken is Good for Cattle (PDF; 460 KB)
 

Photograph of Corn Field
Fuel, Fertilizer Prices Drive New Technology for Portales Farmer

To plow or not to plow, that is the question for farmers like Rick Ledbetter of Portales. The answers all stack up on the side of conservation tillage for Ledbetter, however - resulting in production costs savings and soil improvements at the same time.

Fuel, Fertilizer Prices Drive New Technology for Portales Farmer (PDF; 462 KB)
 

Photograph of Russian Knapweed
Lava SWCD Farmer Tackles Russian Knapweed

One of the passions of New Mexico's soil and water conservation districts is the control of noxious weeds.  And, control of Russian Knapweed is a particular passion for Alfred Saavedra of the Lava Soil & Water Conservation District.

Lava SWCD Farmer Tackles Russian Knapweed (PDF; 201 KB)
 

Photograph of Mimbres River Area
Mimbres River Farmers Benefit from Natural Combination

Farmers in the Mimbres River area are benefitting from a revetment fence that slows floodwater, thanks to the initiative and desire of staff from the New Mexico Environment Department and NRCS Silver City field office to make cooperative conservation happen.

Mimbres River Farmers Benefit from Natural Combination (PDF; 430 KB)
 

Photograph of Sureste RC&D Council Meeting
Pulling it Together as RC&Ds Can

Resource Conservation and Development (RC&D) Councils are known for their ability to pull together divergent entities or resources when the tasks at hand require the involvement of a number of organizations or facets.  The Sureste RC&D proved this out in July when they spearheaded an outreach initiative to gain greater participation in USDA programs from minority landowners and limited resource and beginning farmers and ranchers.

Pulling it Together as RC&Ds Can (PDF; 257 KB)
 

Before and After Photograph of Gilles Farms
FSA, NRCS Team Up to Help Restore Gilles Farms Cropland

A couple of years ago when a levee broke, depositing yards of sediment on a field at Gilles Farms near Arrey, New Mexico, the teamwork of NRCS and the Farm Service Agency (FSA) came into play.  NRCS offered the support of its technical assistance program, and FSA utilized the Emergency Conservation Program (ECP) to answer the needs of this vegetable and crop producer.

FSA, NRCS Team Up to Help Restore Gilles Farms Cropland (PDF; 676 KB)
 

Photograph of Gregory Fenchel demostrates beaver auger to determine ground water depth
Riparian Restoration Team Pushes Knowledge Into the Field

This spring, NRCS New Mexico, in major push, carried its riparian restoration technology into the field. In a series of four workshops, the NRCS New Mexico riparian restoration team introduced its "Guide for Planning Riparian Treatments in New Mexico," and offered key information about assessing alternatives and arriving at sound decisions when planning for these unique ecosystems.

Riparian Restoration Team Pushes Knowledge Into the Field (PDF; 778 KB)
 

Photograph of the Trigo Fire
Claunch-Pinto, East Torrance, and Edgewood SWCDs Respond to Threat

Being the true-hearted partners they are, the Claunch-Pinto, East Torrance, and Edgewood Soil and Water conservation Districts (SWCD) Kicked in high gear when the Trigo Fire in the Manzano Mountains happened.

Claunch-Pinto, East Torrance, and Edgewood SWCDs Respond to Threat (PDF; 642 KB)
 

Photograph of Watson Castillo, local project pronent and member of Ojo Encino Ranchers Committee, discusses solid waste survey with Ojo Encino resident
Coordination Assistance Aids Navajos

In early 2007, the Hub RC&D Council responded when the Ojo Encino Ranchers Committee on the Navajo reservation about securing financial and technical assistance to improve solid waste management in Ojo Encino and possibly other surrounding communities such as Torreon, Counselor, and Pueblo Pintado.

Coordination Assistance Aids Navajos (PDF; 228 KB)
 

Photograph of Envirothon competitor tackles soils test
SWCDs, Others Bring Conservation to Kids

Do you remember racing around the farm yard as a kid playing the Lone Ranger or Gene or Roy?  Many of today's kids lack the opportunity to learn about the kind of rural life you may have known back then.  Several of the state's soil and water conservation districts (SWCD) are setting out to change that.

SWCDs, Others Bring Conservation to Kids (PDF; 1005 KB)
 

Photograph of Wildlife-friendly Water Troughs and Tanks
Carrizozo Area Strives to Save Stock Water, Wildlife

Water tanks, troughs, and ponds that New Mexico ranchers build and maintain for livestock, also become critical sources of water for a large array of wildlife. Taking some simple measures to create escapes routes for birds, bats, squirrels, and other small animals that fall into these structures not only helps valuable wildlife survive, but prevents livestock water degradation caused by decaying animals.  

Carrizozo Area Strives to Save Stock Water, Wildlife (PDF; 877 KB)

Producer Joe Vandever’s Navajo name is ta-de-yhi which means ‘going places’. Little did this child of the land know when he was born west of Grants, New Mexico in 1923 that he was going to play an important role in United States history, as a Navajo Code Talker in World War II.
Navajo Code Talker Honors NRCS Personnel

Producer Joe Vandever’s Navajo name is ta-de-yhi which means ‘going places’. Little did this child of the land know when he was born west of Grants, New Mexico in 1923 that he was going to play an important role in United States history, as a Navajo Code Talker in World War II.

Navajo Code Talker Honors NRCS Personnel (PDF; 2 MB)

Photo of Truth or Consequences Basin
"Basin Absolutely Did Its Job"

The topography of Truth or Consequences and neighboring Village of Williamsburg, combined with New Mexico’s propensity for cloudbursts, has created an environment that is flood prone. However, some clever engineering, provided by NRCS, has helped to bring safety to these communities and prevent disruption of travel, damage to businesses and homes, and sedimentation in the communities and Rio Grande.

Basin Absolutely Did Its Job (PDF; 782 KB)

Playa Lakes in Curry County
Locally Led Work Group Acts to Save Playas

Much has been written about the deterioration of the Ogallala Aquifer in eastern New Mexico and adjacent plains states. Conservationists in the Central Curry Soil & Water Conservation District are not willing to sit idly by and let this huge natural resource issue go unanswered, however. The retort of their local work group has been to make the playa lakes in their area a priority resource concern, and source of action to preserve these valuable environments. 

Locally Led Work Group Acts to Save Playas (PDF; 782 KB)

Removal of old tires in Clayton, NM
Cleaning Up Yesterday's Trash

Conservation practices, like the one at Rainbow Ranch near Clayton, NM, are reviving the littered landscape from years of discarded old cars, tires, and refrigerators.

Cleaning Up Yesterday's Trash (PDF; 782 KB)

Mike Reardon
Conservationist Creates Awesome Ranch

Wanting the best for his family's ranch near Mora, New Mexico, Mike Reardon has embarked on a conservation journey. He has employed many types of conservation practices, including using controlled fires to eradicate invasive brush and trees, planting native species that attract and support wildlife, and streambed restoration. 

Conservationist Creates Awesome Ranch (PDF; 818 KB)

Tallpot and Hydrogel Technology
Tallpot and Hydrogel Technologies Team Up in Semi-Desert Climate

Planting shrubs alongside a semi-desert road near Santa Fe, then only watering them twice and expecting them to thrive sounds like an impossible mission. Yet, that is exactly what the group of innovators at the NRCS Los Lunas Plant Materials Center are doing.

Tallpot and Hydrogel Technologies Team Up in Semi-Desert Climate (PDF; 818 KB)

Bottomless Tank Test
Instilling "Tried and True" into Technology

NRCS has a reputation for bringing "tried and true" technology to New Mexico's farms and ranches. One of NRCS New Mexico's recent innovations currently undergoing a real-world trial is a plastic-lined steel water tank with a false bottom.

Instilling "Tried and True" into Technology (PDF; 614 KB)

Water Depletion Study
Study Yielding Initial Answers to Water Depletions in Sacramentos

The Otero Soil & Water Conservation District (SWCD) is tackling water depletion problems in a 750 square mile area of south-central New Mexico, and instituting a scientific approach to watershed management that they and others can use.

Study Yielding Initial Answers to Water Depletions in Sacramentos (PDF; 695 KB)

Abo Arroyo near Mountainair
Conservationists Nearly Double Water Flow in the Abo Arroyo

The eradication of salt cedar and the reintroduction of native plants to the banks of the Abo Arroyo have initiated the return of a healthy landscape. This conservation effort is significant because the Abo Arroyo, as a tributary of the Rio Grande is a seed source for both invasive plants, like salt cedar, and beneficial vegetation for large areas downstream. 

Conservationists Nearly Double Water Flow in the Abo Arroyo (PDF; 695 KB)

Rehabilitation of the Piedra Liza Dam
Dam Rehab Achieves Goals

Through a partnership between local, state and federal entities, the Piedra Liza Dam, originally built in the late 1950s, has been brought up to modern-day standards. This successful project will ensure the continued protection of the land and people of the Bernalillo area from potentially devastating flooding.

Dam Rebab Achieves Goals (PDF; 923 KB)

Tobosa Plant
PMC Makes Rancher's Crop a Mission

Striving to making more drought-tolerant grasses commercially available to New Mexico ranchers has become one of the many pursuits of the Plant Materials Center (PMC) in Los Lunas. 

PMC Makes Rancher's Crop a Mission (PDF; 308 KB)

Rubberized Ditch Liners on the Acoma Reservation
Sometimes it Takes Tweaking

As New Mexico’s innovative farmers and ranchers seek new and better ways to conserve our natural resources, resounding successes do not always happen the first time. Sometimes it takes tweaking.

Sometimes it Takes Tweaking (PDF; 308 KB)

Rick Holdridge explains subsurface drip irrigation to Dennis Alexander, NRCS State Conservationist
Warm Pecan Pie has Roots in Deming

When you are sitting around the kitchen table after supper immersed in that delectable piece of warm pecan pie dripping with melting ice cream, think of Rick Holdridge and subsurface drip irrigation.

Warm Pecan Pie has Roots in Deming (PDF; 757 KB)

Greg Fenchel demonstrates how weeds can kill riparian restoration specimens.
Old Ways Die Hard

The Los Lunas Plant Materials Center staff finds a challenge in spreading the word about new riparian restoration technology that runs counter to traditional wisdom.

Old Ways Die Hard (PDF; 750 KB)

Mike Shivers at Sichler Farms Produce drip irrigation site
Sichler Farms Produce Introduces Subsurface Drip Irrigation to Socorro County

Sichler Farms Produce is pioneering drip irrigation systems in their operation this spring near San Antonio.

Sichler Farms Produce Introduces Subsurface Drip Irrigation to Socorro County (PDF; 750 KB)

Weeds Meet Their Match in Southeastern New Mexico
Weeds Meet Their Match in Southeastern New Mexico

Multiple agencies formed the Cooperative Weed Management Area to establish countywide organizations to tackle week infestation.

Weeds Meet Their Match in Southeastern New Mexico (PDF; 215 KB)

Subsurface Drip Irrigation
Deming Producer Sold On Subsurface Drip Irrigation

Kevin Penn is using 30 to 40 percent less water on his crops due to drip irrigation systems.

Deming Producer Sold On Subsurface Drip Irrigation (PDF; 452 KB)

Dairy Cow
Dad Had the Paperwork Everywhere

What is positive about comprehensive nutrient management plans (CNMPs)? Listen to Linda Armstrong from Dona Ana County who is the daughter of a local dairyman, and environmental consultant for five dairies that are owned by or affiliated with the family

Dad Had the Paperwork Everywhere (PDF; 417 KB)

Conservation Easements
So You’re Thinking About an Easement Program

To some, conservation easements are controversial while to other landowners they answer a strong desire. Seth Fiedler, NRCS resource conservationist, recently took a minute to explain a little about the Farm and Ranchland Protection Program (FRPP).

So You're Thinking About an Easement Program (PDF; 374 KB)

Solar panels that power a water well
Solar Smarts Turn Forest Area into Prime Habitat

Solar panels that power a water well are making a portion of the Smokey Bear District in the Lincoln National Forest habitable during dry periods for wild turkey, mule deer, elk, and an occasional javelina thanks, in part, to the efforts of the South Central Mountain RC&D, their NRCS RC&D coordinator, and the U.S. Forest Service .

Solar Smarts Turn Forest Area into Prime Habitat (PDF; 646 KB)

 A picture of water
Brine Rehabilitation Poised to Revolutionize

If it would cost you 30 cents a barrel to reinject unusable oil brine back into the ground or 10 cents to clean it up and irrigate a pasture, what would you do?

Brine Rehabilitation Poised to Revolutionize (PDF; 326 KB)

Planting willows using electric rotary hammer drills
NRCSers On Mission To Spread Word

The Los Lunas Plant Materials Center is on a mission to spread the word about riparian planting techniques that work. Their recent demonstration illustrates their efforts to spread the technology they have developed over the past two decades.

NRCSers on Mission to Spread Word (PDF; 308 KB)

A picture of a demo using Bunchgrass
Bunchgrass Demo Launched

Giant sacaton is a native warm season bunchgrass that can reach heights in excess of seven feet and more than four feet wide. The PMC has been evaluating giant sacaton since 1999, by installing windstrip plantings to help protect areas from wind erosion.

Bunchgrass Demo Launched (PDF; 1 MB)

Prescribed burn used to restore grasslands
Restoring Grasslands

Grassland/watershed restoration in the Mangus Watershed meant prescribed burns and erosion control structures – lots of them. The USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service assisted throughout the process with technical expertise and some funding.

Restoring Grasslands (PDF; 254 KB)

A picture of a farmer standing in front of a watershed at sunset
Takes One to Know One

The old adage “It takes one to know one” couldn’t be truer when it comes to farmers. It takes a farmer to know what a farmer really needs. That is why when a farmer like Jimmie Fisher from Aztec speaks up and tells his neighbors how conservation improvements have worked for him, people listen.

Takes One to Know One (PDF; 332 KB)

Eric Biderman is exploring energy savings technologies
Flipping the Power Switch

Do you want to save energy on your farm? You bet – who doesn’t? Do you have an operation that uses irrigation pumps, a greenhouse, or refrigeration?

Flipping the Power Switch (PDF; 214 KB)

Stacy Mills new to NRCS programs
Awkward Buzz Word Yields Answers

Collaborative conservation may be a new and somewhat awkward buzz word in New Mexico conservation circles, but to Stacy Mills of the JC & Frances Mills Family Ptr. LTC of Carlsbad it means finally being able to access the benefits of USDA-Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) in a way that makes sense for his operation.

Award Buzz Word Yields Answers (PDF; 219 KB)

Drinkers on a large storage tank
Cowboy Ingenuity Aids Lovington Rancher

Southwestern ranchers know the need for being inventive and finding practical solutions for issues on the range.

Cowboy Ingenuity Aids Lovington Rancher (PDF; 127 KB)

A picture of Cuba Fire
Conservation Proves Itself at Cuba Fire

Don Moore's continuing drive to improve his rangeland near Cuba, New Mexico is attributed to restricting a wildfire that would otherwise have spread into the Los Pinos area.

Conservation proves itself at Cuba Fire (PDF; 444 KB)

A picture of small farm south of Tome
WHIP Used to Capitalize on Fly-Zone in Tome

Andrew Hautzinger's small farm south of Tome and east of Los Lunas, New Mexico is in a major fly-zone for many migratory birds.

WHIP used to capitalize on fly-zone fire (PDF; 662 KB)

A picture of Giant Sacaton
Entrepreneur Eyes PMC Products

Giant Sacaton was originally developed by the Plant Material Center for non-woody windbreaks in area vegetable fields. Breeding by the PMC has made a dramatic difference – resulting in a large grass that surpasses Pampas grass in stature and is much bigger and showier than its unimproved native forms.

Entrepreneur eyes Plant Materials Center products (PDF; 476 KB)

Last Modified: 11/25/2008