Farm Progress

A career of ‘ugly farming’

September 20, 2007

4 Min Read

Imogene Triplett loves and supports her husband, but the first time she saw his work with what would become a lifelong career, her reaction was, “Glover this looks terrible, they’re going to fire you!”

Luckily he wasn’t fired, but at the time, his wife wasn’t the only one with doubts about Glover Triplett’s work. In 1960, Triplett, an agronomist, and Dave Van Doren, a soil physicist, began research at Ohio State University with growing crops in ground that was not plowed. Termed no-tillage farming, or “no-till,” the method went against what most farmers at the time considered the only proper way to grow crops.

Instead of using a plow to loosen the soil and form rows, no-till farming uses specialized equipment to plant seeds into almost undisturbed soil and crop residue. The use of herbicides for weed control and other management techniques replace plowing during the growing season.

Triplett, now an agronomist at Mississippi State University, grew up in Crawford and the surrounding countryside of Noxubee County, where he saw firsthand the effects of farming without considering its long-term impact on the land.

“When this region was first cleared of trees, it was farmed until the topsoil was depleted and productivity declined,” he said. “The fields were then abandoned.”

The same thing happened in successive waves across the South and other areas of the country, he added. Fields were plowed and farmed until soil nutrients were depleted or topsoil was lost to erosion. Farmers then cleared new fields in the same area or just moved further west.

By the 1950s, there was enough national concern about erosion and the loss of productive farmland to generate support for the work by Triplett and Van Doren at Ohio State.

“At the time, farmers called what we were doing ‘ugly farming,’ but we showed growers looking to convert depleted fields back to productive cropland that no-tillage is the way to do it,” Triplett said.

The management practices Triplett helped pioneer in Ohio led to the acceptance of no-till farming in this country and around the world.

In 1982, Triplett retired from Ohio State, and he and his wife, also a Noxubee County native, returned to Mississippi. Triplett has continued his no-till research with the Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station at MSU.

Breakthroughs in technology, he said, have helped advance the use of no-till farming.

“During the past seven or eight years, technology has reached the point where I could successfully grow corn in a home lawn or cow pasture using no-till,” Triplett said. “Seed with built-in resistance to herbicides make weed control easier and more effective in no-till crops.”

In the South, no-till works best with corn and soybeans, but the method also works well with cotton, Triplett added.

During his long career, Triplett has received numerous honors, including the designation of Fellow of the American Society of Agronomy and the dedication of the original no-till rotation plots at Ohio State as the “Triplett-Van Doren No-Tillage Experimental Plots.”

“One of the exciting things after working all these years on this thing is seeing so much acreage planted to no-till,” he said. “There are now well over 60 million acres of no-till crops in the United States and millions more worldwide.”

The Tripletts recently designated part of their estate to helping continue his work. Proceeds from the sale of a 1,063-acre tract of timberland in Noxubee County will fund the first fully endowed chair in MSU’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.

The Dr. Glover B. Triplett Endowed Chair in Agronomy in the Department of Plant and Soil Sciences will provide leadership in agronomy education and research, as well as outreach to industry, said Michael Collins, head of the Department of Plant and Soil Science.

“The endowed chair funded by Dr. and Mrs. Triplett’s contribution will be invaluable in furthering farming-systems research in Mississippi,” Collins said. “This endowed position will allow us to continue the kind of cutting-edge research for which Dr. Triplett himself is so well known.”

Triplett earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees at Mississippi State before completing a doctorate at Michigan State University in 1959.

The endowed chair continues a record of giving by the Tripletts to Mississippi State. Mrs. Triplett established the Imogene C. Triplett Endowed Scholarship in ornamental horticulture and retail floristry management for Mississippi residents. The couple also established the Dr. Glover B. Triplett Endowed Fund for Crop Research, which provides funds specifically for the Department of Plant and Soil Sciences.

Subscribe to receive top agriculture news
Be informed daily with these free e-newsletters

You May Also Like