July 26, 2016
The shifting, growing role of women in production agriculture signaled the need for Iowa State University Extension and Outreach to create a new program focused on women. Over the last several years, the program has expanded the research-based education specifically designed for and offered to women. The Women in Agriculture program will introduce a special recognition during the upcoming 2016 Farm Progress Show to showcase the lives of eight outstanding Iowa women.
CONSERVATION CONSCIOUS: Mike White, ISU Extension field agronomist, and farmer Cathy Ayers, take a few minutes to enjoy her lakeside CRP acres near Indianola. She uses various soil and water conservation practices on her farm.
The honorees were selected from applications submitted by ISU Extension employees across the state. They demonstrate exceptional contributions to managing and working with livestock and farmland, and providing professional agricultural services.
Recognizing and inspiring all women working in agriculture
“ISU Extension and Outreach has so many wonderful connections with inspiring women working in Iowa agriculture,” says ISU’s Madeline Schultz, manager of the Women in Agriculture program. “The Women Impacting the Land recognition gives us a meaningful way to honor these women and share their stories.”
The women will be introduced and their stories shared at the Iowa State exhibit during Farm Progress Show. The three-day show is Aug. 30 – Sept.1 at Boone in central Iowa. Several women will be on hand each day to meet visitors and talk about their experiences. A special recognition ceremony will be held at noon each day on the Iowa State speaker’s stage.
“Women Impacting the Land” 2016 honorees and hometown
Cathy Ayers – Indianola: Ayers is a Warren County Soil and Water District commissioner and Region 6 director for Conservation Districts of Iowa. The help she received from the district after inheriting her family farm in 2008 inspired her to serve. Ayers built terraces, then shifted to no-till and using cover crops. She enrolled some of her land in CRP, including the CRP Pollinator Program. On her farm Ayers produces corn, soybeans and hay.
Nancy Bohl Bormann – LuVerne: Bohl Bormann, an Iowa State University alum, is an environmental services manager and agronomist for Maschhoff Environmental, Inc. She works with swine producers on nutrient management planning and leads a systems analysis program that looks at company-wide practices to address environmental challenges. Bohl Bormann and her husband, Matt, use strip till in their crop production, serve as consultants and have a custom strip-tillage business.
Kathy Dice – Wapello: Dice is a strong proponent of perma-cropping systems using chestnut, pawpaw, persimmon, aronia, and other trees and perennial plants. These crops stabilize the soil since there is no need for annual cultivation. She and her husband Tom Wahl own Red Fern Farm, an innovative tree and perennial plant nursery, as well as fruit and nut productions.
Jean Driscoll – Mechanicsville: Driscoll and her late husband, George, started farming with lots of time but not much money, often seeking help from local ISU Extension specialists. The couple started no-till in the 1970s – a huge success for them. As their farming operation grew, Driscoll continued to participate in Extension farm management courses. Today, she and two sons farm 1,300 acres of corn and soybeans, and operate a farrow-to-finish swine herd with 350 sows.
April Hemmes – Hampton: Hemmes has been a farmer for 31 years, implementing conservation practices in Franklin County and traveling the world to tell others about sustainably raised crops. She has developed a wetland on her farm; added filter strips along streams, as well as wildlife habitat, a pollinator plot and pasture; and uses no-till and conservation till on her corn and soybean acres. She mentors young people in FFA and 4-H and is a spokesperson for organized agricultural groups for women.
Jenni Peters – Bellevue: Peters welcomes groups to her farm and shares information about the non-traditional strategies her family uses with their bred heifer market – hand feeding and rotating pen/pastures for quiet heifer dispositions; crop rotation of corn, soybeans, hay and pasture to maintain soil; pasture rotation for better weed control; and pasture water tanks formed using tiling, springs and cement basins. She travels internationally on behalf of the trade mission to increase global demand for U.S. beef and pork.
Amy Petersen – Muscatine County: Petersen is the fourth woman of her family to operate the Majestic-Manor Dairy farm, which has passed from mother to daughter over four generations. Petersen and her husband, David, manage the dairy as a closed-loop system where the cows feed the soil, the soil feeds the crops and crops feed the cows. Their innovation has earned them awards and public recognition, including being featured in a 2015 PBS documentary, “This American Land.”
Julie Walters – Villisca: Walters’ passion for the family cow herd and equestrian activities has been encouraged and supported by her connections to ISU Extension and Outreach. The application of what she has learned is paying off in her recordkeeping, pasture management and soil erosion control related to her cattle operation. By applying her leadership, entrepreneurship and lifelong experiences with horse projects, she now guides youth in Page County as the 4-H horse superintendent at the fair.
Videos telling the women’s stories are being posted online at extension.iastate.edu/womeninag.
You May Also Like