benelli-banger
Well-known member
I’m pretty sure farmers have been looking for additional acreage to farm for a long while…I’ve seen it, as has everyone else who spends time in farm country…pheasants forever has biologists who educate farmers about the programs that exist to protect environmentally sensitive land, and compensate them for doing so. I know one of those biologists, they work closely with FSA/NRCS offices… their efforts have been pretty successful. Like anything else, know your options…it’s much easier today to get a farmers attention about conservation programs when corn has a 3 handle and beans have an 8-9 handle, compared with 8 & 15/16 just 3-4 years ago…and costs for most all inputs have gone up considerably over that time. Maybe it will, in fact, just cause the farmer to decide to convert that marginal ground into farm ground…guessing it was heading that way regardless. Lots of these spots that I’m hunting aren’t farmable in most years with normal rainfall…they may be farmable a year or two out of 5…then Mother Nature has a say. A guaranteed stream of $ isn’t such a bad thing, especially with crop prices where they are. My county in SD has increased its CRP vs 2007, as well as other habitat programs. One producer alone enrolled a few thousand acres in CREP in the adjacent county, which I hunt regularly…and that’s a guy who strictly does what puts the most $in his pocket…pretty sure that got the attention of other producers in the area. These areas have lots of marginal ground to begin with, which is why the hunting has historically been good. I’m a fan of educating people, showing them the options, and move on…they know what’s best for them. Did this for a living for 34 years, pretty simple…at the end of the day, there’s plenty of hunting ground where I hunt…we never get to all of it, not even close…I hope these farmers, especially the young ones, can make it, whether there’s a pheasant to shoot or not….