Programs • On-Farm Research
 
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Throughout history, agricultural innovation has sprung from the creativity of farmers. Many of the techniques currently in practice originated when creative farmers faced the challenges of farming, and developed a new way to farm better.

Since 1995, the RAFI-USA On-Farm Research program has assisted peanut and cotton farmers in northeast North Carolina in developing the answers that they need to stay ahead of the changes in agriculture by doing their own research and sharing information. RAFI staff assist farmers in using statistics to get more information and a greater level of confidence in the experiments that farmers have always done, and to share information with other farmers and agriculture professionals.

Activities include:

  • field experiments of reduced-pesticide pest management strategies and crop management techniques including biological control of pests and soil quality
  • field days and farm tours
  • information sharing meetings
  • newsletters.

Basic to this program are the ideas that:

  • The solutions that farmers need to survive and prosper will be found on the farm, and that the experience of farmers is integral to innovation.
  • Economic, environmental and community sustainability are complimentary rather than mutually exclusive.
  • Everyone benefits when farmers interact with other farmers, university researchers and other agriculture professionals as peers and share information freely.
  • The current problems in agriculture today are too complex and change too rapidly to be addressed through traditional technology transfer models.


On-Farm Research Resources

A Non-Wonk Guide to Understanding Federal Commodity Payments. May 2005 (PDF, 4 MB). A 30-page publication explaining how field crop commodity programs work.

View North Carolina On-Farm Research. May 2003 (PDF file). Newsletter topics include cotton tillage practices, wasps to control bean beetles, steps to a successful research project, weed control for firs, organic apples and reducing peanut production costs.

Order the RAFI-USA printed 1998 report, The Peanut Project: Farmer-Focused Innovation for Sustainable Peanut Production, from our Publicationspage (look under "Print Publications.") RAFI-USA's Peanut Project assisted peanut farmers in eliminating over 25,000 pounds of active ingredient of pesticides on over 2000 acres.

Field research

Farmers involved in the RAFI On-Farm Research program use paired-comparison statistics to test production methods. A list of experiments includes integrated pest management strategies for thrips and corn rootworm in peanuts, biological control of peanut diseases, comparisons of alternative growth regulators and defoliants in cotton, and comparisons of cover crop species.

In 2001, based on farmer observations of the effects of limited soil quality on peanut and cotton yields, the On-Farm Research Program began a soil quality initiative with the goal of increasing the health of their farms and further reducing their dependence on off-farm inputs. This work included intensive monitoring of soil quality parameters and comparisons of the effects of production practices on soil quality.

During 2000 and 2001 RAFI staff partnered with faculty of North Carolina State University and North Carolina A&T State University to teach a course on participatory on-farm research to North Carolina cooperative extension agents. Agents from across the state participated in the class. Projects that originated in that class and have continued include strip till versus conventional till cotton, production of organic apples, weed control in Christmas tree production, and others. RAFI staff continue to advise these projects on experiment design, analysis, and program administration.