Rural Route

Page 15

Hebbes Receive

Leopold Conservation Award G

reen Lake County farmers Jim and Val Hebbe have been chosen to receive the Leopold Conservation Award from Sand County Foundation and the Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation. The award announcement was first made during the November 14 meeting of the state Agriculture, Trade and Consumer Protection Board. The Hebbe family, from Green Lake, received the $10,000 award and a Leopold crystal on December 2 at the WFBF Annual Meeting. “Jim and Val Hebbe’s commitment to no-till and other conservation efforts that benefit soil and water is exemplary,” said Dr. Brent Haglund, Sand County Foundation President. “Their onthe-farm practices and off-the-farm leadership make them shining examples of Wisconsin’s agricultural community.” Jim Hebbe has been implementing conservation practices for 25 years and has shared his ideas with other farmers as the Green Lake County Conservationist since 1984. He and his wife, Valerie, raise 1,100 acres of corn, soybeans, wheat and alfalfa in central Wisconsin. In addition to no-till planting all of the crops, he has worked to develop numerous conservation systems that complement

each other, and lead to less erosion and more residue cover on the land. The farm includes land with a significant slope draining into a Class 1 Trout Stream. A water and sediment basin was constructed to help control and reduce field runoff into the stream. Native prairie grasses were planted in a field that borders the creek. Twenty-five acres of evergreen trees were planted on a farm with light and sandy soil. In 1985, he helped develop conservation standards for the Farmland Preservation Program and encouraged participants to control soil erosion at sustainable levels. The Leopold Conservation Award, named in honor of world-renowned conservationist Aldo Leopold, is comprised of $10,000 and a Leopold crystal. The award is now presented annually in eight states to private landowners who practice responsible land stewardship and management. The other finalists included Justin and Lynn Isherwood of Portage County, Steve and Pat Kling of Jackson County, and Mark and Jan Riechers of Lafayette County. Each received $500 for their conservation efforts. The first two recipients of the

Leopold Conservation Award under the Sand County Foundation and Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation partnership were the Bragger family from Buffalo County and the Koepke family from Waukesha County. The Leopold Conservation Award in Wisconsin is made possible through the generous support of The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, American Transmission Company (ATC), Wisconsin Farm Bureau Federation, Rural Mutual Insurance Company and Farm Credit. In 2012, Sand County Foundation also presented Leopold Conservation Awards in California, Colorado, Nebraska, South Dakota, Texas, Utah and Wyoming. The Sand County Foundation is a private, non-profit conservation group based in Madison, dedicated to working with private landowners to improve habitat on their land. Sand County’s mission is to advance the use of ethical and scientifically sound land management practices and partnerships for the benefit of people and their rural landscapes.

on the web For more information, please visit www.leopoldconservationaward.org.

december | january 2012-13

www.wfbf.com

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