cows in forest pasture

Find out more about agroforestry & silvopasture at this free webinar.

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Agroforestry Workshop: Introducing Forest Farming and Silvopasture to the Small Farms Community

  • Wednesday, November 10, 2021, 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM

This free webinar will explore some of the different ways the small farms community can develop greater resilience by adopting agroforestry practices. Agroforestry describes a wide range of land-use practices that combine farming (of plants, animals, fungi) with trees, shrubs and forest ecosystems. Agroforestry can help provide new opportunities to increase farm income while also receiving other environmental and social benefits.

This workshop will give a broad overview of agroforestry with special attention focusing on forest farming and silvopasture. Forest farming is the cultivation of high-value, non-timber forest products under the protection of a forest canopy. Forest farming does not significantly interfere or modify forest ecosystems, but essentially allows agricultural producers to farm in the woods. Some of the forest products that will be highlighted include maple & walnut syrup, raspberries, blackberries, pawpaw, shitake & lions mane mushrooms, nuts trees (walnut, hickory, pecan, hazelnut) and medicinal crops like American ginseng, cohosh and goldenseal.

Silvopasture is the integration of livestock, trees, and forages into existing woodlots or by bringing trees into pasture settings. Grazing livestock under tree cover not only reduces animal heat stress during the summer months, it also allows livestock producers to grow wood or other agricultural products as an additional source of income. Essentially, agroforestry practices like forest farming and silvopasture try to stack multiple enterprises on the same piece of land. Not only can this increase and diversify farm revenue, it can also lead to greater farm resilience.

This online workshop is open to all members of the general public, including those interested in learning about agriculture, new/beginning farmers or longstanding agricultural producers looking to make a change or add something new to their farm. Guest speakers will be Professor Emeritus Dr. Kenneth Mudge, from the School of Integrative Plant Science at Cornell University, and Brett Chedozy, Senior Resource Educator in Agriculture and Natural Resources at Cornell Cooperative Extension of Schuyler County. 

Fee

Free

Register

http://reg.cce.cornell.edu/agroforestryworkshop_235

Contact

Joshua Vrooman
Agricultural Community Educator
jwv33@cornell.edu
315-963-7286 ext. 200

Location

This event is online

Last updated October 7, 2021