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South Dakota - Conservation Reserve Program
"When they built the road back in the 1920s or '30s, they needed fill;
so they took it from the creek, so the creek started taking out the bank. There
had been fenced pasture, and the stream had washed so much away that there were
five fence posts just hanging in air." Roger Orton raises corn and soybeans
on about 1,200 acres along Battle Creek in Lake County. The creek flows into
Lake Campbell which drains into the Big Sioux, the source of water for Sioux
Falls.
Orton recently did some bank stabilization and put trees along a half mile of
Battle Creek in an 80 acre field. "With the two rows of trees, you really
make yourself a border; where otherwise, you're always looking for that extra
row. It makes a nice natural border so you stay far enough back from the creek.
On the home place, we squared off a corner and put it in CRP [Conservation
Reserve Program] where before, you'd try to get as close to the wet spot as you
could. With CRP, you set aside land that probably shouldn't be farmed
anyhow."
"The CRP rent is a toss-up," says Orton who has around 180 acres
enrolled. "There are years you'd do better with crops, other years not.
It's hard to say, but we figure we'll come out even or ahead. The rent will be
enough to pay the taxes--unless they keep going up--and the land payment. We
looked at it as a kind of insurance because we'll have it for the 10 years, and
on some of that marginal stuff it's iffy. You'd hate to miss a land payment if
you did have a disaster."
Orton figures the shrubs and trees he's planting will be good for wildlife.
"There wasn't really good hunting here last fall because our pheasant
population was down so far [because of the record cold 1996-97 winter]; but if
they get some cover, we should start seeing that population come
back--especially if we have another mild winter. I'm looking forward to the
changes in the place. In five years or at the end of 10, there should be some
pretty good hunting."
Also in Lake County is Don Hansen who was unenthusiastic in the beginning.
"So many of the programs that come along they say, 'you will do this or
else,' but this [CRP and the National Conservation Buffer Initiative] seems more
voluntary, and I think they'll get more results. In the past, government
programs have forced you into one thing in order to get another. A lot of
farmers know what they're doing and they don't want someone telling them. The
money helps, but when you go in on a voluntary basis, you want to see it work,
too. The people they get to go into this program are more interested to know how
it works."
Hansen expects "a pretty good rent" for the 21 acres he's enrolling
in CRP along 1.5 miles of waterways on his 160 acre farm. "Besides,"
he says, "it's hard to raise a crop right up to a waterway; you need a turn
lane." Hansen worked out a plan with Chuck Lebeda, the Natural Resources
Conservation Service (NRCS) District Conservationist in Lake County, to plant a
mix of seed "so it will self-select," says Lebeda. "These areas
bounce in and out of hydric soils, and what survives on uplands won't do so well
on hydric soils. With a mix from high ground to low, one of the grasses will
probably catch on and that can help control weeds and hold down erosion the
first year or two. Also, if a producer simply leaves an area with good native
seed sources, it will revert naturally. If you take the pressure off dormant
seeds of native grasses, they'll come back naturally."
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