Nice idea, Spud !!!!! Never thought of lilacs to draw bees. Might have to plant a few at camp. The wives will love them too.Plant lilacs. They are deer browse resistant on my place and bloom up on front end of apple tree bloom periods.
We plant polinator mixes on our 320 acres wildlife habitat farm ..My wife wants a meadow of wildflowers on our retirement property. We are considering looking into a USDA pollinator program.
We are part owners in an LLC that owns a pine farm just under 400 acres. We use the EQIP program for firebreaks and control burns. One of the other LLC members handles most of the paperwork. One year USDA tried to push a different program that uses CSPs or something like that. Our guy looked at what practices we would qualify for and decided the paperwork land documentation was not worth the money USDA pays unlike EQIP.We plant polinator mixes on our 320 acres wildlife habitat farm ..
We participate in the US and state of Mo. Programs . It's a lot of work converting pasture and hay fields to wild flower and native grass but it's worth it . Not only do the pollinators love it but so do quail , deer and turkey .
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I enrolled 11 acres into an EQIP pollinator program in Kentucky. It was pretty smooth. There wasn't much paperwork to it really. It's been a pretty painless experience. I've said it before, but Kentucky's NRCS and KDFWR personnel are top notch and go above and beyond. This is its second growing season. They went out there when I asked if they could check it and see what they thought I needed to do about the johnsongrass. They went out there, sent me pics, gave recommendations, etc. I look at EQIP as just a way to get back some of my tax dollars and put out great wildlife habitat. If you do some of the work yourself, you'll probably come out money ahead. I'll probably even out because I've had to pretty much hire out all the work being an absentee landowner.We are part owners in an LLC that owns a pine farm just under 400 acres. We use the EQIP program for firebreaks and control burns. One of the other LLC members handles most of the paperwork. One year USDA tried to push a different program that uses CSPs or something like that. Our guy looked at what practices we would qualify for and decided the paperwork land documentation was not worth the money USDA pays unlike EQIP.
Our retirement property is tiny by comparison, 16 acres. We would only be planting a fairly small area (an acre or two at most). I'm doubting if the paperwork would be worth it, but I'd like to hear about your experience with whether you think the paperwork would be worth it.
At a minimum, we will probably have the USDA folks come out for a consult. That is free and they've provided some good advise at the pine farm.
Thanks,
Jack
Thanks! Maybe things have changed. Back when we first got hooked up with USDA it was just EQIP. That is pretty straight forward. You know how much they will pay on a per acre, liner foot, or whatever the appropriate measurement is. They told us it was to improve a property for wildlife. It has worked well at the pine farm just as you describe. When we had contractors do the work, we made a little on some practices and lost on others. We pretty much broke even except that we got work done that we wanted to do anyway for free.I enrolled 11 acres into an EQIP pollinator program in Kentucky. It was pretty smooth. There wasn't much paperwork to it really. It's been a pretty painless experience. I've said it before, but Kentucky's NRCS and KDFWR personnel are top notch and go above and beyond. This is its second growing season. They went out there when I asked if they could check it and see what they thought I needed to do about the johnsongrass. They went out there, sent me pics, gave recommendations, etc. I look at EQIP as just a way to get back some of my tax dollars and put out great wildlife habitat. If you do some of the work yourself, you'll probably come out money ahead. I'll probably even out because I've had to pretty much hire out all the work being an absentee landowner.
If they require controlled burns to maintain it, that might be an issue. We do a lot of that at the pine farm, but I think there is a law here that requires permission from occupants of buildings within 1000 feet. It would be an easy burn compared to some of the pine burns we do, but I don't want to deal with neighbors that may fear fire.Our g&f pollinator plantings - EQUIP never came through after 3 years - require a winter and a summer burn 18 months apart. That killed it for me. No way am I burning up my neighbors houses in a 100 degree drought in Aug just to maintain my pollinator field. Putting it in myself this fall