Events

Soil Health Expo 2025

February 7, 2025

Join us at Juneau Community Center on Feb. 7 starting at 8:30 a.m. for our Soil Health Expo. Come and learn about our group’s progress from the past year and discuss what’s next for conservation.

Schedule

February 7, 2024 


8:30 a.m. | Coffee/donuts, networking & vendors, poster sessions, registration

  • *Coffee donated by Higher Grounds Coffee Shop

10:00 a.m. | Welcome, 2023 DCF year in review

  • Tony Peirick, DCF BOD president

10:15 a.m. | 2023 DCF Conservation Outcomes

  • Shawn Wesener, Farmers for Sustainable Food

10:30 a.m. | Roots Not Iron

  • Blake Vince

12:00 p.m. | Lunch

1:00 p.m. | Running the Numbers for Adding Wheat in Your Rotation

  • Jeff Hadachek, UW-Extension Specialist Ag & Applied Economics

1:30 p.m. | Lightning Talks

  • DATCP NOPP: Nitrogen Rate Trial Data for 2023
    – Bill Stangel, Soil Solutions Consulting
  • Rye Cover Crop Termination Timing & Weed Suppression
    – Jim Stute, Independent Research Agronomist
  • Comparing Soil Sensor Data: How Did Soil Health Fields 
    Compare To
  • Conventional Fields in the 2023 Drought
    – Greg Olson, The Sand County Foundation Field Projects Director

2:30 p.m. | Closing comments

  • Tony Peirick, DCF BOD president

2:45 p.m. | Public program concludes

3:00 p.m. | Annual business meeting (members only)

3:30 p.m. | Social – pizza and refreshments

Speakers

Blake Vince

No-till Producer, Ontario, Canada

Blake is a fifth generation farmer from Merlin, Ontario, Canada. Working with his father Elwin, they produce commercial corn, soybeans and winter wheat, cover crop for seed on approximately 1,200 acres. Their farm management practices are centered on soil health. The Vinces are considered to be no-till pioneers in their corner of Canada. They adapted to no-till farming techniques in the early 1980s. This was prior to John Deere entering the no-till marketplace with their single disk opener. Blake is a 2013 Canadian Nuffeld Scholar.

“I am very fortunate to have been taught, from a young age, the merits of no-till farming,” Blake says. “My claim to fame, as a 50 year old farmer, is that I have never used a moldboard plough.”

The Vince’s objective is to leave the soil we manage in better condition for future generations.

“This is true, regardless if our farm will be owned by my children or someone else’s children. I am of the opinion that soil is not an infinite resource,” Blake says.

Today, in his corner of Southwestern Ontario, which is surrounded by the Great Lakes, he says there is a reversion away from no-till back towards conventional tillage. This has increased pressure on adjacent water bodies with nutrient loading due to soil erosion.

“With the use of satellite imagery, it is easy to see the runoff impact from farm fields in Southwestern Ontario,” Blake says. “This concerns me greatly since my family derives our drinking water from Lake Erie. Ongoing tillage practices are contributing to the annual recurrence of blue/green algae blooms in Lake Erie.”

Info

Date:

February 7, 2025

Time:

8:30 am

Location:

Juneau Community Center
500 Lincoln Dr., Juneau, WI

Register

RSVP by:

February 1, 2025

Fee:

$50

No Registration Required

Event Sponsors

If you would like to be a sponsor for this event, please contact us at dodgecountyfarmers@gmail.com