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South Carolina - Economic Benefits, Riparian Areas
Horry County is one of the fastest growing counties in the country. Home to
Myrtle Beach and its houses, commerce, golf courses, and vacation spots, Horry
County also contains 160,000 acres of cropland, 400,000 acres of coastal
wetlands, forest land, the Waccamaw and Little and Great Pee Dee rivers, and
villages of just a few hundred souls.
Horry County also has Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) District
Conservationist Alex Johnson working with private landowners on a variety of
conservation measures. Between the fall of 1997 and the spring of 1998, Johnson
prepared about 175 contracts for landowners to enroll between 1,000 and 1,500
acres in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP), mostly for riparian forest
buffers along open drainage ditches and adjacent to wetlands. Bay systems on
converted wetlands are being restored for waterfowl. One such place, now owned
by a hunt club, boasts the northernmost nesting area for the endangered wood
stork. The owner of another property enrolled 447 acres in the Wetlands Reserve
Program and then donated the acres to the Horry County Conservation Foundation.
The land is around a donut-shaped freshwater bay typical of South Carolina,
about a dozen miles from the coast. Several adjacent wetland areas also are
being restored and protected.
Johnson says he expects that the high growth rate in Horry County will result
in more stringent requirements for nonpoint source water pollution within a
couple of years, and installing buffers now amounts to a head start. "These
riparian buffers, particularly along the ditches, will benefit the whole area.
After all, several hundred miles adds up, and there will be a lot of
nonagricultural benefits from an agricultural program. The 1,500 acres of buffer
strips are filtering sediment, pesticides, and animal waste from 15,000 to
20,000 acres of cropland and pastureland."
There also are monetary benefits to the landowners. One farm owner, who
leases out his land and works off the farm, has enrolled 50 acres in CRP for
riparian forest buffers. He ran the numbers. "At $72 per year per acre,
plus the 50 percent towards planting trees ($80 per acre), you end up investing
about $40 an acre up front. The first year you get all the money back, so you
get a positive cash flow. For the 15 years of the contract, you get $1,080 per
acre (15 x $72). After 15 years you can thin the timber, and at today's prices,
it will bring you $1,000 to $1,500. So, if you take money that comes in from
thinning, and if you'd saved the CRP rental money, you would have $3,000 drawing
interest. That would double again in another 15 years. So, you would get a
$6,000 or even a $10,000 return on an acre in a 30-year period; you can probably
get a $10,000 return--on a freebie! Now, it could all burn up, of course, or be
eaten by bugs." This particular farmer, though he likes the monetary
support, also is fully committed to the environmental benefits. "We're the
second fastest growing county in the U.S., so there is a lot of stress on water
resources. It's a coastal county, so our runoff drains to the beach and to
coastal wetlands, and there's lots of interest. In the rural areas there's still
a lot of development, and these filters are helping to offset that."
Sam Ward lives in Aynor, farms part-time, and works for the South Carolina
Department of Natural Resources. He says, "I'm an avid quail hunter, but I
care about water and natural resources, too; it all interweaves, goes hand in
hand." An unnamed intermittent stream runs through his place into Chinners
Swamp on the northwest border of the farm. It drains into the Little Pee Dee
(under consideration for designation as a Natural and Scenic River), the Great
Pee Dee into Winyah Bay--all of this the focus area for a newly established
National Fish and Wildlife Refuge. Ward has enrolled about eight acres in CRP
for a 100-foot-wide strip of field borders. This will "give a filter for
the water to travel through from corn and soybean fields and provide a corridor
for wildlife--turkeys, deer (which I don't hunt), bobcat, and foxes." He
also is planting food plots for quail, using native vegetation--"that's
probably better for quail than anything." He adds that while he is
"first a quail hunter, these filters also help water and benefit the whole
farm."
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