Thanks to Koch Agronomic Services (AGROTAIN) I was able to attend the 2012 Conservation in Action Tour again this year. I visited with Greg Schwab, Director of Agronomy, during the Conservation Technology Expo which is held after lunch on the tour. Greg is in the photo at their booth in the expo.
We talked about how farmers are proactively investing in conservation research and practices on their farms. He says it’s all about “efficient utilization of what your limiting resources are.” That’s where their AGROTAIN product comes in when you’re talking about nitrogen. “Using AGROTAIN whenever you apply urea helps to conserve that limited resource.”
I asked him what he was hearing from farmers on the tour and he said that the issue of water in areas like Illinois has come up a lot with some Illinois farmers wishing they had some center pivot irrigation. But he says that it’s looking like a good year across the corn belt judging by what people are telling him.
Listen to my interview with Greg here: Interview with Greg Schwab
2012 Conservation in Action Tour Photo Album
AgWired coverage of the CTIC Indian Creek Watershed Field Tour is sponsored by AGROTAIN




The Chief of USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service is Dave White. Dave was our lunch speaker during the 2012 Conservation in Action Tour. He also participated in the tour and talked about NRCS’ voluntary, incentive-based conservation work with private landowners.
Hopefully you’re one of the thousands who have viewed the 
Since Delta region farm runoff makes its way eventually to the Gulf of Mexico, the 2012 Conservation in Action Tour heard from Phil Bass, acting director of the
Managing special projects is Richard Ingram’s specialty. He does it for the
Rob Coker farms corn and soybeans in Yazoo County, Mississippi. He’s currently serving as the President of the Mississippi Corn Promotion Board and just completed his term as Chair of Delta F.A.R.M. He’s a progressive conservationist who is always looking for new technologies and practices.
Matt Hicks, U.S. Geological Survey, talked to the 2012 Conservation in Action Tour about water quality monitoring. We were standing next to a monitoring station that collects data from one of the drainage ditches on the farm. You can find photos of it in the online photo album.
Buddy Allen grows cotton, corn, soybeans and rice in Tunica County Mississippi. He’s highly involved in conservation organizations and invests in new technologies to improve irritation efficiency. Buddy says he’s got a great relationship with all the various groups and agencies working on conservation in the Delta area.