Farm Practices for Managing Water Webinar

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  • Опубликовано: 30 апр 2024
  • This webinar aired on April 26, 2024. Sponsored by the Maine Farmer Resource Network (MFRN), this webinar focuses on soil health and engineering practices that can help farmers mitigate the negative effects of too much water. Participants will learn an overview of techniques, and important considerations for implementing these practices and will see how a Maine farm has employed some of these methods to fit the scale and goal of their farm. The speakers include Ian Jerolmack (Stonecipher Farm) and Candi Gilpatric (NRCS). The Maine Farmer Resource Network is a coalition of Maine agriculture agencies and organizations working together to connect aspiring, beginning, and transitioning farmers to resources for farm business success.
    Ian Jerolmack is the co-owner of Stonecipher Farm. Started in 2009, Stonecipher Farm is a certified organic mixed vegetable farm, dabbling in livestock and fruit, while focusing on storage vegetables, and tropicals such as ginger and turmeric. Year-round, and dedicated to their customers; Ian Jerolmack and Emily Goodchild serve many health food stores, but have made a real name for themselves serving all the best restaurants of Portland, as well as mid-coast Maine. Due to the coronavirus, the farmers were forced to pivot, launched a CSA, and now sell a lot to other farms. With 5 kids in tow, they farm full-time, and employ 5 full-time folks in summer, and 2 in winter. They have an acre of greenhouse space and are hoping to work more in there, really maximize the shoulder seasons, and maybe one day, take it easier in the summer. They started the farm on blank land, and the longer they are there, the more the entire project pleases them, as trees grow, the land improves, buildings are finished and employees come back. Ian and Emily feel this place is growing a legacy, and hope to help that carry on to their kids, for the perpetual benefit of the community.
    Candi Gilpatric (NRCS) is a graduate of UMaine with a BS in Agricultural Engineering. Candi grew up on a livestock farm in Western New York along Lake Ontario. She came to Maine for college and has never left. Candi started with NRCS as a work-study student. Upon graduation, she became a full-time employee assisting the engineer in the Bangor area. In 1992 the agency moved her to Lewiston where she assisted the Southern Maine area engineer until his retirement. She currently provides engineering to the Southern 8 counties of Maine with assistance from Abel Cardona-Villeneuva. Candi always enjoys teaching and has instructed trainings for NRCS across the nation over her 30 years of service. She still instructs locally to new NRCS hires in Maine and at district workshops. When not working Candi enjoys time with her family at camp.
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