Utah Organic Grain Producer Builds on Last Generation's Successes
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Utah farmer Lydia Poulsen
sells about
90 percent of her organic grain to area
livestock producers. When she transitioned
between 1992 and 1994, she found a ready
market, but advises other farmers to
thoroughly research their sales options.
– Photo by Jerry DeWitt |
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When Lydia Poulsen was a small child, she recalls that the ground
on her parents' Utah farm "would set up like cement. We had
areas that we called 'alkali slicks' where, because of the high
pH, nothing would grow."
After Poulsen converted 800 acres of small grains and hay and 3,000 acres of
pasture to organic production in 1989, the alkali slicks all but disappeared.
And now, following rainstorms, the soil no longer crusts.
"There are a lot of positive things about organic farming," she said,
attributing the improvements in her soils to the elimination of chemical fertilizers.
For Poulsen, who farms with her husband, Dennis, near Snowville, Utah, the switch
to organic production was not that hard because she was already rotating small
grains, alfalfa and oat hay for her 130-head beef operation. About 10 percent
of her grains stay on the farm for the cattle while she sells the rest off the
farm.
Poulsen's father also employed many environmentally sound methods in his production
system, including techniques compatible with current organic practices. When
he subdivided the farm, leaving 800 acres to Lydia, she merely adapted many
of his successful practices.
"My father recognized that sprays were limited in how long they would
control the bugs in alfalfa," Poulsen said, "and could see that there
was a better, more complete way to go."
To control aphids, weevils and other insects, her father introduced ladybugs.
Following in his footsteps, even before Poulsen switched to organic, she used
"nola-bait" to control grasshoppers. After years of releasing ladybugs,
along with lacewings and praying mantises, "the natural population is now
established," Poulsen said.
Poulsen converted to organic after a large organic dairy in the area asked
her to certify her grain. At that time, the transition period was only one year
instead of the current three, and with a ready-made market, her transition was
smooth. For growers looking to transition to organic production today, Poulsen
recommends that they research a reliable market before beginning.
Poulsen also wanted to find ways to improve the health of her ground. While
additions of organic matter clearly have improved her soil, Poulsen has been
frustrated by fertility constraints in her organic operation, specifically in
wheat.
"It's hard getting fertility into the ground and getting the microbial
population up," Poulsen said, referring to the prohibitive cost of transporting
compost or manure to her land. Potential organic farmers, she adds, should calculate
costs of manure or other amendments for their systems.
Instead, Poulsen has tried winter peas and clover as nitrogen suppliers, but
seed is very expensive. She also has experimented with gypsum and fish emulsion.
But while she admits that wheat yields do suffer from less nitrogen - they tend
to be half of what they are the first year following alfalfa - she hasn't seen
net profit drop.
While profit is important, it's not the sole argument for farming organically.
More than anything, Poulsen said, "Organic provides a way to educate people
about agriculture. People are far more interested in why I farm organically
than why I farm."
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