Coos County
Coos County has a total area of about 1 million acres and a population of 63,655. The county falls within the Coast Range ecoregion and is drained by the Coos and Coquille rivers. Interior flood plains typically flood in winter and standing water is common. The mean rainfall of 60 inches falls mostly in winter. Timber is produced on about 82% of the area with pasture, hay production and urban use covering the bulk of remaining acres. About 69% of the land is privately owned. Specialty crops such as cranberries are significant economically despite relatively smaller acreages.
Current Financial Assistance Opportunities for Farmers, Ranchers and Forest Owners in Coos County
The following Conservation Implementation Strategies are available to help Coos County agricultural producers address targeted resource concerns identified in the Long Range Plan. Click the project names below for more information:
- Local Foods and Food Systems Resilience Initiative
- Forest Management Planning
- Prescribed Fire Management Planning
- Gorse Wildfire Hazard Mitigation
- Irrigation Automation for Cranberry Farms
- Fish Passage and Habitat Improvement Coos County
- Climate-Focused Sustainable Livestock Production in Oregon
Additional Funding Opportunities...
In addition to the local projects above, producers may also apply for statewide programs such as the Conservation Stewardship Program, the Organic Initiative, Seasonal High Tunnel Initiative, On-Farm Energy Initiative, and conservation easement programs. Visit with your local District Conservationist for more information on these and other programs, or visit the NRCS Programs webpage.
Local Work Group Meetings
Every year, NRCS hosts a Local Work Group meeting where farmers, landowners, conservation partners and other members of the community discuss the natural resource needs for the county. Based on feedback from those meetings, NRCS updates the county's Long Range Plan and develops new Conservation Implementation Strategies to address those resource concerns. You may contact us anytime to express concerns or comments about conservation needs in the county, and we encourage you to attend the next Local Work Group meeting in your county. For more information about Local Work Group meetings, contact your local NRCS office.