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PROJECT REPORT h FARMER/RANCHER h SARE

Final Results FW98-099 Wiersma Dairy Agroforestry Project

http://wsare.usu.edu

Location: OBJECTIVES Buhl, This project proposes to plant an agroforestry demonstration area consisting of hybrid poplars as a field windbreak and woodlot. The objective is to use liquid Funding Period: Jan. 1, 1998 – Dec. 31, 1999 waste from 1,000 dairy cows and the milking parlor in combination with other water to irrigate the woodlot. The hybrid poplars will take up the nutrients, Grant Award: providing an alternative solution to the area’s dairy-waste problem. $5,000 Project Coordinator: ABSTRACT Patty Wiersma Three counties in the Magic Valley – Gooding, Jerome and – harbor 1776 E. 4500 N. more than half of Idaho’s growing dairy industry. The waste the dairies generate Buhl, ID 83316 is more than the entire city of Seattle, reported a local newspaper. Also, the dairies discharge liquids and liquid wastes from their milking facilities into Technical Advisor: Richard Yankey holding ponds, and the dairies and local residents alike are concerned that these District Conservationist liquids might leak into the groundwater or irrigation canals. USDA NRCS 1441 Fillmore St., Suite A Growing hybrid poplars has been shown to provide income from saw log Twin Falls, ID 83301 production, serve as windbreaks for crops, homes and farm buildings and clean Cooperators: wastewater from dairies by taking up the nutrients in the wastewater. At the Gary Kuhn same time, the windbreaks provide a visual screen, easing complaints from National Agroforestry Ctr. urban neighbors. University of Washington Box 351310 Seattle, WA To test these potential benefits, Patty and Jim Wiersma of the Wiersma Dairy near Buhl, Idaho, planted 14 acres of hybrid poplars to determine which of five Lewis Eilers varieties would work best for . Members of a local Boy Scout Idaho Dairymen’s Assn troop and students from the College of Southern Idaho helped plant 500 of each 890 Shoshone Ave. Twin Falls, ID variety in a multi-row windbreak around the dairy and woodlot. The scouts and students have helped record progress through photographs.

SPECIFIC RESULTS Patty Wiersma and Richard Yankey, district conservationist with NRCS and the project’s technical advisor, have provided information on the most promising varieties to the NRCS in Idaho and the agency’s Western region agroforester, Gary Kuhns. Additionally, they are working with the Idaho Division of Environmental Quality, the Idaho State Department of Agriculture, the USDA Agricultural Research Service and NRCS to set up a long-term monitoring program on the woodlot.

The windbreak planted around the dairy has stimulated interest locally and nationally and is being used as an example for local county zoning criteria and for the dairy industry.

Wiersma says that over the first two years of the project, many lessons were learned, lessons that are being shared with people interested in planting hybrid poplars. In addition, she says that she and Yankey have learned much about the processes needed to develop a successful woodlot operation.

“This an ongoing project with new lessons still being learned and shared with others,” says Wiersma. “There are still many years of activities to come before the harvesting of a crop from the woodlot and beginning of the second cycle.”

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POTENTIAL BENEFITS Knowing which trees will adapt best in southern Idaho’s climate will help area producers make planting decisions.

FARMER ADOPTION AND DIRECT IMPACT No reports have made of other producers adopting the practice.

FUTURE RECOMMENDATIONS OR NEW HYPOTHESES The project’s participants intend to: • plant more hybrid poplars under a micro-sprinkler system; • establish a monitoring system that will provide satisfactory results to the environmental, scientific and dairy communities; • involve the local school district through 4-H, FFA and other school clubs in a monitoring program; • expand the hybrid poplar plantation concept to other dairies and acres; and • show how a constructed wetland could be used as a filter for the dairy waste before it’s applied to the poplars.

DISSEMINATION OF FINDINGS The hybrid poplars were highlighted during the Water Quality Beyond 2000 program in Boise in January 1999 and during a dairy waste management workshop in March and a poplar tour in September, both sponsored by the Balanced Rock and Mid-Snake RC&D. Also, a group of Utah dairy producers visited the project site in October 1999.

In addition, the project has been featured in reports on local radio and television stations and in local newspapers, with interviews done with reporters from as far away as Boise and Spokane.

PRODUCER INVOLVEMENT Many producers have visited the windbreak and woodlot seeking new ideas for their dairies.

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