Agriculture Production, Management, and EnvironmentPlan of Work

Back to the Program

Daviess County CES

Title:
Agriculture Production, Management, and Environment
MAP:
Agriculture Production, Management, and Environment
Agents Involved:
Hardy, Heisdorffer
MAJOR PROGRAM 1:
Farm Management, Economics and Policy
MAJOR PROGRAM 2:
Horticulture, Consumer and Home
MAJOR PROGRAM 3:
Grains
MAJOR PROGRAM 4:
Agriculture and Extension Leadership Development
Situation:

Equity in farm business has been on a path of decline since approximately 2014, as net revenues have fallen due to inventory supply expansion and demand destruction related to trade policy and COVID-19-induced economic recession.  Rapid increase in farmland values have leveled from the 2006 to 2013 period, while at the same time, revenues from grain and livestock receipts have declined, forcing many to acquire farm operating loans based on collateral rather than cash flow lending standards, further eroding equity in their land holdings.  COVID-19 has arrived to bring further trouble to the agricultural economy.  Restrictions on travel have reduced motor vehicle travel and subsequent ethanol consumption, the sink for nearly 40% of the U.S. corn crop, during a period when South America is capitalizing on Chinese agricultural tariffs of imported agricultural commodities from the United States.  In the past two years, nearly 20% of net farm income has been comprised of government subsidies.  This non-recurring income has kept farms going but has become essential for survival, rather than the safety net as designed.  Continuation or curtailing quantitative easing could be how the future of some businesses are determined.        

In 2018 the National Gardening Survey indicated that 77% of American households garden in some way. Recent trends indicate that more and more Americans are growing their own food (35% of households), while interests in ornamentals remains high, particularly in the area of gardening to support pollinators and other ecological uses of plants. American gardeners will continue to look to Cooperative Extension for specific answers to their gardening questions while protecting the environment 

Long-Term Outcomes:
Intermediate Outcomes:
Initial Outcomes:
Evaluation:

Initial Outcome:  Participants will identify three native plants that attract pollinators and butterflies.  

Indicator:  Number of people who can identify three native plants that attract butterflies 

Method:  Self-reporting survey after meeting 

Timeline:  Late winter and Spring 2021


Intermediate Outcome:  People will use Extension information to maintain gardens properly  

Indicator:  Number of people using Extension information to maintain gardens properly

Method:  Follow up self-reporting survey  

Timeline: Summer and fall 2021


Long-term Outcome: Maintain or increase ag profit or reduce expense and/or risk

Indicator: Financial reporting

Method: Observation of KFBM summaries

Timeline: Summer 2022

Learning Opportunities:

Audience: Public

Project or Activity: Putting Your Garden to Bed

Content or Curriculum: Extension publications

Inputs: Agent, virtual meeting, Daviess County Public Library

Date: August/September 2020


Audience: Newspaper and Newsletter Audience and Gardeners 

Project or Activity: Best Management Practices to Protect the Environment, such as: Rain gardens, IPM, and protecting pollinators

Content or Curriculum: Extension publications

Inputs: Agent, Extension Master Gardeners

Date: Winter 2020 and Spring 2021


Audience: Grain Farm Business Managers

Project or Activity: Ag Expo

Content or Curriculum: Research-based discussion of production challenges

Inputs: Extension Specialists and Curriculum

Date: January 2021


Audience: Beef Farm Business Managers

Project or Activity: CPH 45 Feeder Calf Marketing

Content or Curriculum: Beef IRM committee recommendations

Inputs: Extension Specialists and Local Sale Committee

Date: 2021


Audience: Agronomists, Seed Dealers, Grain Producers

Project or Activity: Daviess County Grain Research and Demonstration Plots

Content or Curriculum: Provide unbiased data supporting the efficacy of seed brands promoted in our area

Inputs: Seed companies and local plot planning committee

Date: 2021


Audience:  Gardeners, General Public

Project or Activity:  Vegetable Gardening

Content or Curriculum:  UK Publications

Inputs:  Agent, Extension Master Gardeners

Date:  Winter 2021 and Spring 2021


Audience:  Gardeners, General Public

Project or Activity:  Gardening to Attract Pollinators and Butterflies

Content or Curriculum:  Extension Publications

Inputs:  Agent, Extension Master Gardeners

Date:  January 2021 and February 2021




Success Stories

Using Virtual Horticulture Webinar Wednesday to Help Consumers Enjoy Holiday Plants Longer

Author: Annette Heisdorffer

Major Program: Horticulture, Consumer and Home

Horticulture Webinar Wednesday, developed by Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service Agents for Horticulture Education in March of 2020, continued as a way to reach clientele with science-based information during the COVID-19 pandemic. The webinars were presented live through the virtual format of Zoom on Wednesdays at 2:00 p.m. ET throughout the Commonwealth.  Thirty-minute long presentations were followed by a question-and-answer period. All presentations were recorded and posted to Kentuc

Full Story

Crossing Through This: Managing Farm and Family in 2020

Author: Clinton Hardy

Major Program: Grains

Crossing Through This: Managing Farm and Family in 2020                Through this COVID-19 period, agriculture has continued the normal seasonal activities but has not been without feeling the effect of how life has changed because of COVID.  Home school, internet church, personal isolation and countless businesses closed has changed how life is lived and we do not yet know what normal will become.  Certainly, vaccine to treat and protect

Full Story

Ag Expo Virtual

Author: Clinton Hardy

Major Program: Grains

Law in Kentucky requires private pesticide applicator training every three years.  In the era of covid, meeting in person is limited so the January Ag Expo educational program adopted a Zoom format that allowed participants to renew certification from the comfort and safety of their own home.  Increasing grain prices since harvest has created a lot of excitement for the upcoming growing season, with CFAP round three set to deposit, 2021 could be another profitable year in grain and liv

Full Story

CT Broadleaf Wrapper Tobacco

Author: Clinton Hardy

Major Program: Tobacco

Tobacco remains an important crop economically to hundreds of farms in Daviess County.  Due to unknown reasons, dark air-cure tobacco contracts were reduced 48% in the spring of 2020 cutting the gross income by nearly half for our most lucrative tobacco type.  To offset less tobacco income, some growers adopted a new type of tobacco for our area.  Nearly 100 acres of Connecticut broadleaf cigar wrapper tobacco was grown in Daviess County in 2020 for the first time ever.  Exte

Full Story

Agriculture Today: New Era of Prosperity or Temporary Opportunity?

Author: Clinton Hardy

Major Program: Farm Management, Economics and Policy

               No one will forget 2020.  Covid-19 didn’t care where you work or live, what church or school you attend.   Everyone was affected, if not infected in one way or another.  Agriculture has certainly has its ups and downs during the past 18 months.  2020 began with boost of confidence as trade agreements were established and plans were made for a rebound in demand for agricultural products.  By mid-summer the commo

Full Story

University of Kentucky Fencing School

Author: Clinton Hardy

Major Program: Forages

Daviess County Extension Service had the opportunity to host one of two University of Kentucky Fencing Schools  in May 13.  UK specialists and fencing industry experts used a combination of classroom instruction and hands-on demonstration to teach the basics of a well-built livestock fence.  Participants learned that poor fence condition increases risk of liability to a farm business as animals are more likely to gain access to public roads, greatly increasing risk of a motor vehi

Full Story

Certified Arborist Preparation Training Benefited the Community

Author: Annette Heisdorffer

Major Program: Horticulture, Commercial

Managing trees and shrubs on city property can be time consuming and costly, especially if not managed properly.  The Daviess County Cooperative Extension Service and City of Owensboro partnered to offer the Certified Arborist Preparation Training at the request of the City Grounds Manager.  The grounds manager wanted to become a Certified Arborist and to teach the employees he supervises how to properly prune and manage trees in parks, along streets, and in sports complexes owned by t

Full Story
Back to the Program