Patience and Persistence Pays Off With Fred Yoder

Published: Sept. 19, 2023, noon

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Improving soil health doesn\\u2019t happen overnight, but it\\u2019s amazing how a series of small changes, compounded over time, can really make a difference. In this episode, we talk to 4th generation Ohio farmer Fred Yoder about things he\\u2019s been implementing over the past four decades to improve his soil health and what he has experienced firsthand that he wants farmers everywhere to experience as well. Along with his wife Debbie and his 2 children, he grows corn, soybeans, and wheat. He also has operated a retail farm seed business for over 36 years and sells seed and other technology products to farmers.\\xa0

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\\u201cI think we should be building soil and the things that we\'re doing today, I think we\'re building rather than even maintaining, we\'re actually improving soil. Dad wasn\'t the first to say it, but I asked him when I bought the farm, any last minute, recommendations. He said, \\u201cJust leave it in better shape than what you got it.\\u201d And today the farm is the most productive it\'s ever been and in the best shape it\'s ever been. And I think that\'s because of some of the things that we\'ve been doing over the years.\\u201d - Fred Yoder

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Fred is also a founding board member and now Co-Chair of \\u201cSolutions from the Land,\\u201d a non-profit that explores integrated land management solutions to help meet food security, economic development, climate change and conservation of biodiversity goals. He also serves as Chair of the \\u201cNorth American Climate Smart Agriculture Alliance,\\u201d representing all factions of production agriculture, and working to ensure that farmer-to-farmer education and economics will be the driving force to adapting to a changing climate while feeding the world.

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\\u201cI look at my soil as my 401k, you won\'t get instant gratification from it\\u2026 What they have to be convinced of is the fact if you invest in some of these practices that it\'ll pay dividends later on down the road. The first couple of years, you have to actually get your soils conditioned for less tillage and for cover crops and things like that. You give me a farmer for three to five years and I\'ll have him for life because once you go through that transitional change, then all of a sudden it supports itself.\\u201d Fred Yoder

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This Week on Soil Sense:

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  • Meet 4th generation Ohio farmer Fred Yoder and explore his soil health journey over the past 4 decades of farming

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  • Discover the advice Fred offers all producers on pursuing soil health practices on their operations

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  • Explore the organizations and efforts Fred participates in to support soil health practices

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Thank you to the Soy Checkoff for sponsoring this Farmers for Soil Health series of the Soil Sense podcast. This show is produced by Dr. Abbey Wick, Dr. Olivia Caillouet, and Tim Hammerich, with support from the United Soybean Board, the University of Missouri Center for Regenerative Agriculture and the Soil Health Institute.

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If you are interested in what soil health looks like in practice and on the farm, please subscribe and follow this show on your favorite podcast app, and leave us a rating and review while you\\u2019re there. Check out the Farmers for Soil Health website at FarmersForSoilHealth.com.\\xa0

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