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UMCA News Release
Center for Agroforestry begins series of trainings for
professionals
Jan. 25, 2006
As part of an ongoing commitment to increase the knowledge and
adoption of agroforestry practices across Missouri and the Midwest,
the University of Missouri Center for Agroforestry (UMCA) has
expanded the depth and reach of its training program. This effort
began with a successful Agroforestry Professional Training Workshop
held Jan. 10 and 11, 2006, in Columbia, Mo.
In the fall of 2005, the Center was awarded a Sustainable
Agriculture Research and Education (SARE) Professional Development
Program grant to fund a series of agroforestry trainings geared
toward a targeted audience: individuals from state and government
federal agencies, University Extension personnel, and non-profit and
professional organizations dealing with issues that directly impact
landowners and their management of forests and farms. More than 50
professionals representing several disciplines in the natural
resource-based fields attended the January training. The event was
designed to increase core agencies' knowledge about agroforestry
practices and the benefits they offer when applied as sustainable
farming practices, and to foster the establishment of social
networks for assisting resource professionals and landowners in
finding answers regarding the establishment and management of
agroforestry.
The training workshop utilized a new and updated Agroforestry
Training Manual designed to facilitate all phases of implementing
the five agroforestry practices -- alley cropping, silvopasture,
riparian forest buffers, windbreaks and forest farming. [Manual
available for downloading on the Publications page]. Speaker topics
included assisting landowners with budgeting/planning for
agroforestry practices; marketing the products they grow; designing
agroforestry for wildlife habitat management; and institutional
barriers affecting agroforestry. In addition to classroom
instruction, a tour of the Horticulture and Agroforestry Research
Center at New Franklin, Mo., featured demonstrations of diverse
agroforestry practices.
Natural resource professionals broke into smaller multi-agency work
groups to evaluate implementing agroforestry practices into a
real-world agroforestry case study, Idolour Farm in Boone County,
Mo. The farm is owned and managed by J. Arbuckle, Ph. D. student at
the University of Missouri-Columbia and a Center for Agroforestry
research collaborator, who plans to implement ideas presented by the
group into an agroforestry plan. A cow/calf operation, woodlots, and
riparian areas are among the farm's features Arbuckle may expand to
meet his goals - including a goat operation, non-traditional crops
and a rotational grazing system.
"I felt like I was in one of those TV shows, 'Extreme Agroforestry
Makeover' or something. It was great to have so many resource
professionals thinking about ways that we might improve our
conservation and production practices through agroforestry," said
Arbuckle. "One of the things that was most interesting to me was how
the groups came up with so many ideas for agroforestry applications
for such a small farm - windbreaks, riparian buffers, silvopasture,
forest farming - all on under a hundred acres. Plus, they gave me
good ideas on how we might find some funding to help with
establishment costs. It was a fun learning experience and we plan to
implement some of those ideas over the coming years."
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