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The Professional Development Program

What's a PDP project?
Adding livestock like sheep and goats to rangeland can help ranchers manage noxious weeds and reduce the fuel that can prompt out-of-control Western fires, two goals that were the focus of a SARE professional development project based in Washington. Project leader Don Nelson introduced new grazing concepts, from holistic management to multi-species grazing, to some 30 agricultural professionals and ranchers from Washington, Idaho, Oregon, and California.

His series of workshops resulted in at least five new range enterprises featuring diverse herds and flocks to control unwanted vegetation. “Most ‘noxious’ weeds are not the problem—they’re a symptom of how the land has been managed,” Nelson said. Cattle like to graze on grass, but sheep also dine on forbs and goats prefer woody “browse” material. “If you know these preferences, you can inventory a site and create a future landscape using them as tools,” he said.

Introducing new livestock species provides a lower cost, potentially more effective strategy than spraying herbicides, he said. Another benefit is the market potential, as goat meat is a staple of some segments of America’s culturally diverse population. After the training, one of the participants teamed up with a nearby rancher to introduce sheep and goats to reduce knapweed and potentially hazardous undergrowth on a property in Dallesport, Wash.

Other SARE projects have evolved from the professional development workshops, including grazing goats in a tree plantation to reduce unwanted “understory” vegetation in Clearwater County, Idaho; and introducing goats and sheep to slow the invasive Russian Olive tree on a West Richland, Wash., ranch.

Some of the goat producers with whom Nelson has worked have found new markets through California wholesalers. “There’s an untapped market potential,” Nelson said.

[For more information about this Western Region project, go to www.sare.org/projects and search for EW01-006.]

Organization

Begun in 1994, the Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE) Professional Development Program provides sustainable agriculture education and outreach strategies for Cooperative Extension agents, Natural Resources Conservation Service staff and other agricultural educators who work directly with farmers and ranchers. Administered and funded by SARE, the Professional Development Program receives annual congressional allocations of about $4.5 million.

Professional Development Program funds have been used for both state-specific planning and competitive grants for learning opportunities. All 50 states and six island protectorates devised strategic plans with sustainable agriculture learning opportunities. In subsequent years, each state submitted an annual update of strategies and activities to achieve sustainability goals. Those activities are overseen by SARE state sustainable agriculture coordinators.

The program also supports competitively funded grant awards for educational opportunities such as workshops, manuals and videos, and on-farm tours and demonstrations.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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