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Exploring Sustainability in Agriculture

Profiles

Carmen Fernholz - Madison, Minnesota

Travis and Amy Forgues - Alburg Springs, Vermont

Max Carter - Douglas, Georgia

Ed Sills - Pleasant Grove, California

Greg Gunthorp - LaGrange, Indiana

Bob Muth - Williamstown, New Jersey

Rosa Shareef - Sumral, Mississippi

Bob Quinn - Big Sandy, Montana

Larry Thompson - Boring, Oregon

Richard and Peggy Sechrist - Fredericksburg, Texas

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Exploring Sustainability in Agriculture

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Rosa Shareef in pasture with goats

Rosa Shareef
Sumral, Mississippi

SUMMARY

Pastured poultry, goats and sheep on 10 acres
Member of an 84-acre religious community dedicated to agriculture and rural life

BACKGROUND

To learn more about raising poultry on pasture, Rosa and Alvin Shareef participated in a SARE grant project headed by Heifer Project International. Funded to help southern farm-ers with the "nuts and bolts" of alternative poultry systems, Heifer staff organized hands-on training sessions and provided start-up funds and processing equipment.

"I'm a city girl raised in New Jersey," Rosa Shareef says. "My husband was born in Mississippi and raised in Chicago, so we needed as much education as we could get."

Shareef subdivided her 10 acres into two permanent, five-acre pastures, with smaller pad-docks defined with electric fencing. To minimize disease potential, she rotates her poul-try around one five-acre plot for a year, then switches them to the other plot for a year. The goats and sheep then rotate through the plot just vacated by poultry.

Using a simple design, the Shareefs made their own cages, which are enclosed with chicken wire and rest on wheels. They keep 50 to 95 chickens in each pen, moving it daily. The chickens harvest their own grass, bugs and worms, but the Shareefs also supplement their diet with a high-protein poultry feed.

PROFITABILITY
Next to Alvin's off-farm job as a teacher, the family's most dependable source of income is the sale of their pastured broilers. They process about 100 chickens per month, in keeping with state regulations, at an average weight of about 4 pounds at $1.50 per pound. Shareef calculates the cost of raising one of her broilers to an age of eight weeks at about $3, so profits are roughly $3. Multiplied by 100 birds per month, monthly profits hover around $300.

The family raises about 50 turkeys a year for Thanksgiving sales. At 20 pounds each, they are real money-makers. Shareef also produces 20 meat goats annually, sold primarily to area Muslims who slaughter them for religious ceremonies.

In all, livestock sales contribute about 10 percent of their household income. "Good product at a good price tends to sell itself," Shareef says. "All I have to do is keep working to make more of it."

ENVIRONMENTAL STRATEGIES
Founders of the religious com-munity, New Medinah, planned to have minimal nega-tive impact on the environ- ment. All members of the com-munity live in a concentrated section of the property that sur-rounds a school for the commu-nity's children. That leaves lots of open space for gardens, pas-tures and woodlots.

The pastured animals deposit lots of fertilizing manure, and because the different grazers select different grasses and are moved daily, they add vigor to the pastures, Shareef says. That's even during drought.

COMMUNITY, OUTREACH, QUALITY OF LIFE
To help young people, Shareef teaches kids in a community garden.

Members of New Medinah also help each other grow their goat herds in a "pass-on" program by giving each other animals after their goats produce offspring. "By using livestock raised with-in your group, everyone knows how it was raised," Shareef says.

 

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