Top Banner
Susan Donaldson Building a Building a Small-acreage Program Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter Stephanie Etter
43

Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Dec 22, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Susan Donaldson

Building a Building a Small-acreage ProgramSmall-acreage Program

Stephanie EtterStephanie Etter

Page 2: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Step 1*: Identify your target audience

Watershed or subwatershed County or other political division Areas with similar zoning Subdivision or HOA Etc…

**Assumes you have already identified a need!

Page 3: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Step 2: Understand your audience!

Use some form of information-gathering:

What are their expectations of the class?

What is their preferred method of accessing information, etc.?

How long have they had their property? When are they available? What do they want to accomplish on

their property? What motivates them?

Page 4: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Motivators for small acreage owners

Improve appearance of property

Learn new skills Save time and money Meet people Increase productivity

(sometimes) Meet regulatory

demands (maybe) Increase property values

(sometimes)

Page 5: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

These are NOT necessarily motivators!

Making a profit from the property

Management for productivity

Protecting the environment

Page 6: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

What issues are of concern to almost everyone in the audience?

Drinking water quality and quantity Ugly properties Nuisances (blowing dirt, manure piles,

flies, etc.) Irrigation water supply and management And…weeds! Generally a top interest.

Page 7: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Step 3: Plan the basic program

Decide what will be included Pick your delivery methods Set dates Find instructors Determine program rules

You already know how to do this!

Page 8: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Don’t forget to get buy-in from your co-workers!

Page 9: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Step 4: Figure out a budget

Grant funds Program fees Balance

expenses and income

Include a cushion

Page 10: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Step 5: Market the program Shotgun vs. targeted

Page 11: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Step 6: Select evaluation tools

Awareness Knowledge Behavior change Ecosystem change

Page 12: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Ways to use the curriculum: Idaho

Teach the entire curriculum - Idaho has been doing so since 2002

Fee ($275 in 2008) covers soil, water and forage analysis

One fee per unit (2 individuals)

Includes tours & follow-up site visit

Each unit provides dinner once during the training

Attend future classes & tours at no charge

Page 13: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

The Washington experience

Teach entire course in 12 weeks

Includes soil testing Participants develop a

stewardship management plan

Allow public to attend select modules or lessons

Use lessons separately to target various issues

Fact sheets, magazine articles and Web site

Property tours

Workshops and Training

The Small Acreage program offers workshops throughout the year on issues of interest to rural landowners. Topics include mud and manure management, pasture management, wells and septic maintenance, and fencing for livestock. For those who wish more in-depth information, the program also offers a 12-week series, Living on the Land: Stewardship for Small Acreages. Graduates of this training come away with a workable plan for their property that they created themselves based on what they learned in class. For the next class, check the calendar (http://clark.wsu.edu/calendar/index.asp) or call 360-397-6060 x7720.

http://clark.wsu.edu/horticulture/smallAcreageProgram.html#workshops

Page 14: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

The Oregon experience

Four 3-hour workshops (managing soil, water resources, pasture and grazing management, weed management)

One 5-hour field tour on Saturday, with picnic lunch

Includes binder of materials

$20 fee

Living on the Land Series- CreswellStewardship for Small Acreages

Thursday, July 24, 2008 - Thursday, August 14, 2008

Living on the Land is a workshop series tailored for small acreage landowners. There are four workshops in the series and one field tour. Workshops will be taught by agency and industry professionals and local landowners. The field tour will have stops to visit with landowners in the Coast Fork Willamette River Watershed area. Participants will learn about some of the management practices these neighbors are implementing on their land. Living on the Land is sponsored by OSU Extension Service Small Farms Program, East Lane Soil and Water Conservation District and Coast Fork Willamette Watershed Council.

Page 15: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

New to Minnesota Piloted this spring Eight-week course, 3

hours per class Use the “unit”

concept Includes forage and

soil testing Includes a site visit

consultation from an Extension Educator

'Living on the Land' Workshop Starts Feb. 6Minnesota Ag Connection - 01/28/2008

Dream of owning acreage in the country? Have an existing acreage that needs a plan for the best possible results? Do you have ideas for supplementing your income or increasing your on-farm income? If the answer is "yes," University of Minnesota Extension has a workshop series to help you and your family.

The "Living on the Land" workshop series is being launched as a pilot course this spring by University of Minnesota Extension. The eight-week course is designed to arm landowners with basic agricultural information to enable them to be good stewards of their 40-acre (or less) tract. The course will begin with goal setting and individual property inventory, then address soil, plant and water basics.

Page 16: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Spotlight on the Nevada Small Ranch Program: Delivery methods

Community meetings Outdoor workshops Indoor classes Individual site visits Monthly newsletter Small Ranch Manual Special events and forums Barbecues and neighborhood work parties

Page 17: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 18: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 19: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 20: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 21: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Work with the media

Page 22: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 23: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Plan events just for fun!

Page 24: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Be ready to respond to local issues

Page 25: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 26: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 27: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Too little…and too much!

Page 28: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 29: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

What do you do if no one comes?

Make sure you’re addressing priority local concerns

Adjust delivery methods (timing, type of classes, etc.)

Offer incentives Market more effectively Offer one-on-one visits Consider focus groups or other

means to get feedback from your audience

Page 30: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 31: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Elements of successful Elements of successful small-acreage programssmall-acreage programs

Page 32: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Activities

Reinforce teaching Ideas included in Lesson Plans

Page 33: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Recognize your volunteers

Page 34: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.
Page 35: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Elements of successful educational programs

Place emphasis on community and neighborhood – why did they move to the area in the first place?

Page 36: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Effective teaching

Use a variety of sources of information and methods of delivery to meet various learning styles

Use humor to reinforce learning

Page 37: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Evaluate your program

Program satisfaction rating Pre- and post-tests Knowledge gain Behavior change (number of BMPs

completed) Water quality data before and after

installation of BMPs

Page 38: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Idaho Evaluation Results-2007

My knowledge about land stewardship & My knowledge about land stewardship & resource management. resource management.

2.482.48 3.93*3.93*

My preparedness to adopt best My preparedness to adopt best management practices.management practices.

2.322.32 4.05*4.05*

My ability to plan, enterprise budget and My ability to plan, enterprise budget and implement animal or crop system(s).implement animal or crop system(s).

2.002.00 3.80*3.80*

My ability to effectively find and access My ability to effectively find and access resources to support my small-acreage resources to support my small-acreage system(s).system(s).

2.152.15 4.13*4.13*

Before LOTL After LOTL

1=None, 2= Little, 3=Some, 4=Good Deal, 5=Great Deal* p<.001

Page 39: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Provide resource and guidance

Provide technical assistance (Cooperative Extension, NRCS, etc.)

Resources for future assistance

Page 40: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Be flexible

Willingness to adapt to special needs and interests of audience – aversion to herbicides, etc.; horse lovers, etc.

Page 41: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Persistence Repetition and

reinforcement of information Reinforcing a sense of

community Potential high turnover of

property owners means continued outreach activities will always be needed

Page 42: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

What barriers must be overcome?

New audience we’re not used to working with

Requires a high degree of “touch” and a lot of time and energy

Must be a very active listener and very flexible

Can generate work for others who may not be ready for it

Sustaining the program after the first few years can be tough

Page 43: Susan Donaldson Building a Small-acreage Program Stephanie Etter.

Remember:

Understand your audience and their needs

Establish trust: Be an advocate, not an adversary

Be flexible Respond to new or special needs Build a sense of community Reward volunteers Have fun!