Missouri Farmer Has No Debate With Conservation Programs
Northwestern Missouri farmer John Hickman has been debating
the benefits of no-till farming with his friends and neighbors for
years. He’s found that convincing conventional tillers to switch to
no-till can be a difficult task. But once in awhile, nature dumps a load of
evidence that is hard to deny.
In May, after more than seven inches of
rain fell in 24 hours, Hickman surveyed
his fields to see what damage the storm
had caused. The next thing he did was
call the Andrew County office of the
Natural Resources Conservation Service
to thank the staff for their encouragement
and assistance in establishing conservation
practices.
“I was very proud,” Hickman says. “I
had a few places where water ran over
terraces, but I didn’t have any damage
like I saw on farms down the road from
me where they are not no-tilling.”
Hickman, 63, has always been a farmer,
including the past 36 years in Andrew
County. In the mid 1980s, he started building waterways, terraces, filter
strips and diversions to slow soil erosion.
“I was on the Andrew County Soil and Water Conservation District board
(for 14 years) and we always talked about conservation programs. The more
we talked about things, the more interested I got in trying them,” he says.
In 1985, Hickman decided to try no-till.
“It took me about 10 years to be convinced to try it everywhere, but now
I no-till everything.” Hickman says. He grows about 1,200 acres of corn
and soybeans. He says no-till reduces his time and costs associated
with growing crops and maintaining conservation practices, and often
improves yields.
“My yields are just as good as the yields people get
who use conventional tillage, and in dry years mine
are quite a bit better,” he says.
To help him install conservation practices and make
the switch to no-till, Hickman has taken advantage
of federal and state cost-share programs. He is not
just a no-tiller, however, and if there is a program
available, Hickman is willing to try it. He has had
land enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program
since 1987, and has been utilizing the Environmental
Quality Incentives Program since 2004. He now has
more than a dozen EQIP contracts on about 1,000
acres. The contracts help Hickman pay for grid sampling,
crop scouting, diversions, pest management, nutrient management
and yield mapping.
“John is just a leader,” says NRCS District Conservationist Rodney
Saunders. “He’s not afraid to try new things.”
NRCS Resource Conservationist Ted Utz, who has worked in Andrew
County since 1980, says he has seen many instances of that.
“When he started to get into the grid soil sampling, he got the equipment
and worked with someone in the business. They sampled his fields
together. He just jumped right in and figured it out,” Utz says. “Not many
farmers his age would tear into the technology like he has.”
Utz says that Hickman has been just as passionate about promoting conservation
as he has been about implementing it. For example, as president of
the Andrew County SWCD board, Hickman led the way for the district to
obtain one of the first two grants available from the Missouri Department
of Conservation to purchase a no-till drill for loan to farmers in the county.
“The reason I’ve been doing it is because of these two right here,”
Hickman says while pointing at Utz and Saunders. “They kept telling me
that I ought to try this and try that, and I did. And it really works.
“It’s important, too. We’ve got to save our soil or our next generation won’t
have anything.”
Hickman says he recently returned from Germany where he was part of a
group that met with farmers there. He was surprised to discover a nearly
non-existent conservation program in Germany.
Some of the German farmers will soon know more about conservation,
though, because they have accepted the group’s offer to come to Missouri
and see how conservation can be utilized.
Hickman says the conservation programs in the United States are extremely
helpful, adding that he doesn’t know why even more farmers don’t take
advantage of them.
“EQIP money has paid for a lot of what I’ve done. I figure if NRCS is paying
the bill, why not try it,” he says. “I’ve utilized all of the conservation programs,
and I’m thankful that we have them.”
In recognition of Hickman’s efforts, the Andrew County Soil and Water
Conservation District awarded him it’s prestigious “Master Conservationist
Award” in April 2007.
Hickman says the appreciation goes both ways.
“I’ve gotten some awfully good assistance from NRCS and the district,” he says. “People have helped me with whatever I needed.”
Fortunately, after many years of utilizing conservation practices and programs, not even a seven-inch rain created a need for damage repair assistance on Hickman’s land.
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Written by Charlie Rahm, NRCS
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