Blazin' Grazin' And Other Wild Things

Eastern Redcedar: Why Oklahoma Is Acting

50 min · 5 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Eastern Redcedar: Why Oklahoma Is Acting

Descripción

Eastern redcedar control is becoming one of Oklahoma’s biggest land, water, and wildfire issues—and this episode explains how the Oklahoma Conservation Commission is turning concern into action. John Weir, Laura Goodman Ph.D., and Mark Turner Ph.D. visit with Trey Lam and Trampas Tripp about the Terry Peach North Canadian Watershed Restoration Pilot Project, a program designed to reduce invasive woody species, protect rural communities, improve rangeland health, and put more water back into Oklahoma soils and streams. The conversation covers how cedar control moved from years of talk to funded work on the ground, including brush-free zones around towns and infrastructure, prescribed fire training with rural fire departments, cost-share programs for landowners, and research measuring soil moisture, forage recovery, wildlife response, and wildfire risk. The episode makes one thing clear: managing cedars is not just about removing trees—it is about protecting rural lives, homes, grasslands, water supplies, wildlife habitat, and the future of working lands. Top 10 takeaways 1. Cedar control is public safety work. Removing dense cedars near towns, homes, propane tanks, fertilizer plants, towers, and roads can give firefighters safer access and slow wildfire spread. 2. The Terry Peach Project turned years of talk into action. Oklahoma had studied eastern redcedar for decades, but the combination of drought, wildfire, water concerns, and available funding finally produced a funded program. 3. Brush-free zones are a practical first step. The program is not always trying to clear entire properties; it often starts by creating strategic fire breaks and access corridors. 4. Rural fire departments are key partners. The program is helping firefighters understand when prescribed fire can reduce future wildfire risk instead of treating all fire the same. 5. Prescribed fire and “controlled burns” are not the same thing. A prescribed fire has a plan, weather parameters, trained people, equipment, and a go/no-go decision process. 6. Cedars cost landowners forage. Dense cedar stands can shade out grass, reduce grazing capacity, and lower the productive value of rangeland. 7. Cedars are a water issue. Guests discussed early findings showing major soil moisture differences between dense cedar areas, treated areas, and open native range. 8. Wildlife responds when cedars are removed. The episode highlights benefits for quail, deer, and especially wild turkeys when cedar-choked areas are reopened and roost trees are protected. 9. Landowner demand is high. The new cedar-removal cost-share pilot received more than 500 applications, showing that many Oklahomans are ready to act. 10. The next challenge is scaling statewide. Oklahoma’s cedar problem varies by region, and future work may need to address salt cedar, mesquite, mountain juniper, and other invasive woody species with different control strategies. Detailed timestamped rundown 00:00:00 — Sponsor and episode setup The episode opens with the Oklahoma Conservation Commission sponsor message and frames the conversation around cedar control, safer towns, healthier rangeland, and water conservation. 00:02:16 — Guest introductions John Weir welcomes Trey Lam and Trampas Tripp from the Oklahoma Conservation Commission. The hosts set up the episode as a discussion of one of the state’s most visible conservation programs. 00:03:20 — Trampas Tripp’s background Trampas explains his path from college and early work with the Corps of Engineers into the Oklahoma Conservation Commission, where he now leads the Land Management Division. 00:04:16 — Trey Lam’s conservation roots Trey shares his background growing up on a southern Oklahoma farm and becoming involved in conservation districts before becoming executive director of the Oklahoma Conservation Commission. 00:05:02 — How the Terry Peach Project began Trey explains that Oklahoma had talked about eastern redcedar for years, but drought, wildfire, water disputes, and state funding finally aligned to create action. 00:07:46 — The original three-part approach The project began with research, prescribed fire training, and brush-free zones. The goal was to measure water, soil moisture, grass production, wildlife response, and wildfire mitigation benefits. 00:12:15 — Rural fire departments join the effort Trampas describes how the program works with fire departments to shift from only reacting to wildfire toward using prescribed fire and fuel reduction as prevention tools. 00:13:22 — Fighting Fire with Fire workshops John and Trampas discuss the workshops that combine classroom training with hands-on burning when conditions allow. Around seven workshops had been held, with strong interest from across the state. 00:14:00 — Ada workshop draws major attendance The Ada training brought about 100 attendees and 25 fire departments, including some from Kansas, showing regional interest in Oklahoma’s prescribed fire model. 00:15:32 — Brush-free zones and mitigation crews Trampas explains that 14 technicians are working across the state to remove volatile woody fuels near communities, infrastructure, and high-risk areas. 00:16:07 — Protecting infrastructure in Woodward Trey gives the example of work near a fertilizer plant on the southwest side of Woodward, where cedar removal created safer access and reduced wildfire risk. 00:17:34 — Towers, propane tanks, and rural hazards Laura and Trampas discuss examples near communication towers and propane infrastructure where cedar removal created safer zones around critical facilities. 00:19:51 — Burn plans and prescribed fire cost-share The group discusses growing demand for prescribed burn plans and a $20-per-acre prescribed fire cost-share program for landowners. 00:21:13 — Prescribed fire versus wildfire The hosts emphasize that prescribed fire is planned, weather-dependent, staffed, and equipped—very different from wildfire or informal “controlled burns.” 00:22:55 — “Controlled burn” confusion Trey and John explain how media and public language often blur prescribed fire with escaped brush-pile or trash burns, which creates misunderstanding. 00:25:29 — Why cedars are such a large problem Trey lays out the impacts of cedars on wildfire behavior, water use, grass production, quail, deer, and other wildlife habitat. 00:26:08 — Wildlife impacts and turkey roosts Mark explains how cedars can eliminate cottonwoods and other roost trees, creating long-term habitat losses for wild turkeys. 00:27:11 — Soil moisture findings Trey discusses early findings showing dense cedar areas with very low soil moisture compared with native range and treated areas. 00:30:03 — Rainfall interception and runoff John and Laura discuss research showing how dense cedar canopy can prevent rainfall from reaching the ground and how restored grasslands can improve cleaner runoff. 00:33:21 — Health, ticks, mosquitoes, and public awareness The conversation expands to the human-health and public-comfort impacts of cedar-dominated areas, including pollen, ticks, mosquitoes, and smoke particulates. 00:34:52 — Legislative support and changing attitudes Trey explains how cedar control has moved into mainstream policy discussions, with lawmakers increasingly recognizing the scale of the issue. 00:40:27 — New cost-share demand Trampas says a pilot cost-share program received more than 500 applications, showing strong landowner interest in cedar removal. 00:42:17 — How landowners access the program The first step is contacting the local conservation district. Applications are ranked by acreage, density, removal method, management approach, and other factors. 00:43:41 — Targeted priority areas Trey explains why the program focuses on specific high-impact areas, including Beckham County to Altus Lugert, the Panhandle, Payne-Lincoln-Pawnee, Eufaula, and the Blue River. 00:45:14 — Community mitigation work Trampas describes technicians working with emergency managers and communities to build defensible spaces and demonstration areas. 00:47:27 — Cedar rows as wildfire fuses Trey describes abandoned railroad corridors and other unmanaged strips as “fuses” that can carry fire directly into rural towns. 00:48:20 — Future expansion Trey discusses hopes to expand the program statewide and adapt it to other invasive woody species, including salt cedar, mesquite, mountain juniper, and eastern Oklahoma invasives. 00:49:36 — Wrap-up The episode closes with thanks to Trey, Trampas, and the Oklahoma Conservation Commission for supporting the podcast and advancing cedar-control work across Oklahoma. Find all resources at BlazinGrazinWildThings.com

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22 episodios

episode Bring Back Turkeys With Better Habitat artwork

Bring Back Turkeys With Better Habitat

Wild turkey numbers rise and fall for a lot of reasons, but better brood habitat may be one of the most practical things landowners can influence right now. In this episode of Blazin’ Grazin’ and Other Wild Things, Dr. Mark Turner, Oklahoma State University Extension wildlife specialist, joins John Weir and Dr. Laura Goodman to talk through what turkeys need after nesting season. They cover poult survival, forb-rich brood cover, cedar encroachment, roost trees, grazing, fescue control, prescribed fire, predator pressure, and why landowners can have a bigger impact than regulation changes alone. Key takeaways: * Nest success matters, but low poult survival may be a bigger bottleneck for turkey populations. * Good brood cover is open at ground level, rich in forbs and insects, and tall enough to hide poults while letting hens see predators. * Cedar and other woody encroachment can reduce roosting value, limit visibility, and hurt hen survival. * Thick grass monocultures, fescue, bermudagrass, and Old World bluestem can make poor turkey and quail habitat. * Prescribed fire, grazing, patch burning, and targeted introduced-grass control can help landowners create better turkey country. Detailed timestamped rundown 00:00–02:14 — Opening and setup The episode opens with the Oklahoma Conservation Commission sponsorship message, show introduction, host introductions, and the main topic: wild turkeys, turkey numbers, and habitat management. 02:14–04:41 — Why turkeys are timely right now Mark explains that spring turkey seasons are wrapping up and many poults are hitting the ground. He frames the conversation around turkey population declines, ongoing research, and why brood survival deserves more attention.  04:41–05:19 — Nest success versus brood survival The group discusses why nest survival often gets the spotlight, even though brood survival may be a bigger limiting factor. Mark notes that many studies show nest success around 20% to 30%, while brood survival is often still low. 05:19–07:48 — Rio Grande and Eastern turkey differences John asks about differences between Rio Grande and Eastern turkeys. Mark explains that Eastern turkeys, especially in the Southeast, appear to be doing worse overall, while Rio Grande turkeys often have better brood conditions where rainfall produces forbs and open grassland structure. 07:48–09:12 — What good brood cover looks like Mark describes the ideal brood habitat: open plant communities dominated by forbs, some bare ground for movement, and knee- to waist-high structure that hides poults while allowing hens to watch for predators. 09:12–12:54 — Grazing, forbs, and the grass monoculture problem John and Laura explain how grazing, bare ground, and plant diversity influence forb production. Laura pushes back on the idea that the best pasture is always the thickest grass stand, emphasizing that forbs provide insects, seeds, and wildlife value. 12:54–14:23 — Burning season and patch-burn diversity John explains that repeated spring burning can favor warm-season grasses and reduce forbs. He recommends mixing burn timing, including growing-season and early dormant-season burns, and using patch burning to create habitat diversity. 14:23–19:56 — Fescue and introduced grass control Mark and Laura discuss fescue, Old World bluestem, bermudagrass, and other introduced grasses. Fescue is described as one of the easier problems to treat, especially after frost when native warm-season plants are dormant. 19:56–22:19 — Woody encroachment and hen survival Mark shifts to cedar and woody encroachment, explaining that the issue is not just roost loss. Heavy woody cover can reduce hen survival, especially during vulnerable nesting periods. 22:19–24:02 — Real-world cedar control success John shares an example from his son’s property, where cedar work, burning, and opening creek and roost areas coincided with a major increase in wintering turkeys. 24:02–28:10 — Predators, exposure, heat, and poults The group discusses poult vulnerability during the first two weeks of life. Mark explains that poults cannot roost in trees early on, face predator pressure, and can die from cold rain or extreme heat. 28:10–31:33 — Shade, airflow, and roost tree structure Laura asks what poults and hens may seek during hot weather. Mark says open, shaded woods with airflow may matter, and then explains that roost trees are usually selected more for structure and open ground conditions than species alone. 31:33–34:27 — Why turkey numbers can bounce back John notes seeing more turkeys this year. Mark connects better recent harvests to improved conditions a couple of years earlier, including weather, productivity, and possibly insect availability like cicada hatches. 34:27–35:26 — Habitat is predator management Laura summarizes a key idea: predator management may have a role, but habitat that helps turkeys feed, move, hide, and thermoregulate is foundational. Mark says habitat management is, in many ways, predator management. 35:26–38:40 — The closest thing to a key action John asks for the one best thing landowners can do. Mark says reducing understory woody cover and promoting forbs is critical, and prescribed fire is hard to beat. He recommends more frequent burning in eastern Oklahoma than many properties currently receive. 38:40–40:47 — Private landowners drive the outcome Mark explains that agencies can manage public lands, but private landowners control much of the habitat. John adds that more landowners are now listing wildlife habitat as a major reason for burning. 40:47–42:46 — Resources and closing The group closes by mentioning OSU Extension fact sheets on converting introduced grasses, Rio Grande wild turkey management, Eastern wild turkey management, and prescribed fire. Find all resources at BlazinGrazinWildThings.com

2 de jun de 202642 min
episode Eastern Redcedar: Why Oklahoma Is Acting artwork

Eastern Redcedar: Why Oklahoma Is Acting

Eastern redcedar control is becoming one of Oklahoma’s biggest land, water, and wildfire issues—and this episode explains how the Oklahoma Conservation Commission is turning concern into action. John Weir, Laura Goodman Ph.D., and Mark Turner Ph.D. visit with Trey Lam and Trampas Tripp about the Terry Peach North Canadian Watershed Restoration Pilot Project, a program designed to reduce invasive woody species, protect rural communities, improve rangeland health, and put more water back into Oklahoma soils and streams. The conversation covers how cedar control moved from years of talk to funded work on the ground, including brush-free zones around towns and infrastructure, prescribed fire training with rural fire departments, cost-share programs for landowners, and research measuring soil moisture, forage recovery, wildlife response, and wildfire risk. The episode makes one thing clear: managing cedars is not just about removing trees—it is about protecting rural lives, homes, grasslands, water supplies, wildlife habitat, and the future of working lands. Top 10 takeaways 1. Cedar control is public safety work. Removing dense cedars near towns, homes, propane tanks, fertilizer plants, towers, and roads can give firefighters safer access and slow wildfire spread. 2. The Terry Peach Project turned years of talk into action. Oklahoma had studied eastern redcedar for decades, but the combination of drought, wildfire, water concerns, and available funding finally produced a funded program. 3. Brush-free zones are a practical first step. The program is not always trying to clear entire properties; it often starts by creating strategic fire breaks and access corridors. 4. Rural fire departments are key partners. The program is helping firefighters understand when prescribed fire can reduce future wildfire risk instead of treating all fire the same. 5. Prescribed fire and “controlled burns” are not the same thing. A prescribed fire has a plan, weather parameters, trained people, equipment, and a go/no-go decision process. 6. Cedars cost landowners forage. Dense cedar stands can shade out grass, reduce grazing capacity, and lower the productive value of rangeland. 7. Cedars are a water issue. Guests discussed early findings showing major soil moisture differences between dense cedar areas, treated areas, and open native range. 8. Wildlife responds when cedars are removed. The episode highlights benefits for quail, deer, and especially wild turkeys when cedar-choked areas are reopened and roost trees are protected. 9. Landowner demand is high. The new cedar-removal cost-share pilot received more than 500 applications, showing that many Oklahomans are ready to act. 10. The next challenge is scaling statewide. Oklahoma’s cedar problem varies by region, and future work may need to address salt cedar, mesquite, mountain juniper, and other invasive woody species with different control strategies. Detailed timestamped rundown 00:00:00 — Sponsor and episode setup The episode opens with the Oklahoma Conservation Commission sponsor message and frames the conversation around cedar control, safer towns, healthier rangeland, and water conservation. 00:02:16 — Guest introductions John Weir welcomes Trey Lam and Trampas Tripp from the Oklahoma Conservation Commission. The hosts set up the episode as a discussion of one of the state’s most visible conservation programs. 00:03:20 — Trampas Tripp’s background Trampas explains his path from college and early work with the Corps of Engineers into the Oklahoma Conservation Commission, where he now leads the Land Management Division. 00:04:16 — Trey Lam’s conservation roots Trey shares his background growing up on a southern Oklahoma farm and becoming involved in conservation districts before becoming executive director of the Oklahoma Conservation Commission. 00:05:02 — How the Terry Peach Project began Trey explains that Oklahoma had talked about eastern redcedar for years, but drought, wildfire, water disputes, and state funding finally aligned to create action. 00:07:46 — The original three-part approach The project began with research, prescribed fire training, and brush-free zones. The goal was to measure water, soil moisture, grass production, wildlife response, and wildfire mitigation benefits. 00:12:15 — Rural fire departments join the effort Trampas describes how the program works with fire departments to shift from only reacting to wildfire toward using prescribed fire and fuel reduction as prevention tools. 00:13:22 — Fighting Fire with Fire workshops John and Trampas discuss the workshops that combine classroom training with hands-on burning when conditions allow. Around seven workshops had been held, with strong interest from across the state. 00:14:00 — Ada workshop draws major attendance The Ada training brought about 100 attendees and 25 fire departments, including some from Kansas, showing regional interest in Oklahoma’s prescribed fire model. 00:15:32 — Brush-free zones and mitigation crews Trampas explains that 14 technicians are working across the state to remove volatile woody fuels near communities, infrastructure, and high-risk areas. 00:16:07 — Protecting infrastructure in Woodward Trey gives the example of work near a fertilizer plant on the southwest side of Woodward, where cedar removal created safer access and reduced wildfire risk. 00:17:34 — Towers, propane tanks, and rural hazards Laura and Trampas discuss examples near communication towers and propane infrastructure where cedar removal created safer zones around critical facilities. 00:19:51 — Burn plans and prescribed fire cost-share The group discusses growing demand for prescribed burn plans and a $20-per-acre prescribed fire cost-share program for landowners. 00:21:13 — Prescribed fire versus wildfire The hosts emphasize that prescribed fire is planned, weather-dependent, staffed, and equipped—very different from wildfire or informal “controlled burns.” 00:22:55 — “Controlled burn” confusion Trey and John explain how media and public language often blur prescribed fire with escaped brush-pile or trash burns, which creates misunderstanding. 00:25:29 — Why cedars are such a large problem Trey lays out the impacts of cedars on wildfire behavior, water use, grass production, quail, deer, and other wildlife habitat. 00:26:08 — Wildlife impacts and turkey roosts Mark explains how cedars can eliminate cottonwoods and other roost trees, creating long-term habitat losses for wild turkeys. 00:27:11 — Soil moisture findings Trey discusses early findings showing dense cedar areas with very low soil moisture compared with native range and treated areas. 00:30:03 — Rainfall interception and runoff John and Laura discuss research showing how dense cedar canopy can prevent rainfall from reaching the ground and how restored grasslands can improve cleaner runoff. 00:33:21 — Health, ticks, mosquitoes, and public awareness The conversation expands to the human-health and public-comfort impacts of cedar-dominated areas, including pollen, ticks, mosquitoes, and smoke particulates. 00:34:52 — Legislative support and changing attitudes Trey explains how cedar control has moved into mainstream policy discussions, with lawmakers increasingly recognizing the scale of the issue. 00:40:27 — New cost-share demand Trampas says a pilot cost-share program received more than 500 applications, showing strong landowner interest in cedar removal. 00:42:17 — How landowners access the program The first step is contacting the local conservation district. Applications are ranked by acreage, density, removal method, management approach, and other factors. 00:43:41 — Targeted priority areas Trey explains why the program focuses on specific high-impact areas, including Beckham County to Altus Lugert, the Panhandle, Payne-Lincoln-Pawnee, Eufaula, and the Blue River. 00:45:14 — Community mitigation work Trampas describes technicians working with emergency managers and communities to build defensible spaces and demonstration areas. 00:47:27 — Cedar rows as wildfire fuses Trey describes abandoned railroad corridors and other unmanaged strips as “fuses” that can carry fire directly into rural towns. 00:48:20 — Future expansion Trey discusses hopes to expand the program statewide and adapt it to other invasive woody species, including salt cedar, mesquite, mountain juniper, and eastern Oklahoma invasives. 00:49:36 — Wrap-up The episode closes with thanks to Trey, Trampas, and the Oklahoma Conservation Commission for supporting the podcast and advancing cedar-control work across Oklahoma. Find all resources at BlazinGrazinWildThings.com

5 de may de 202650 min
episode Local Voices, Lasting Conservation - BGWT 202 artwork

Local Voices, Lasting Conservation - BGWT 202

What does the Oklahoma Conservation Commission actually do, and how does it work with local conservation districts across the state? In this episode, Trey Lam and Lisa Knopf-Owen join the Blazin’ Grazin’ and Other Wild Things crew to explain how Oklahoma’s conservation system grew from Dust Bowl-era roots into a locally led network supporting landowners, communities, and natural resources. The conversation covers flood control, water quality, soil health, prescribed fire, brush management, and cost-share programs that help producers put conservation into practice. It’s a practical look at how voluntary conservation, strong partnerships, and local leadership keep Oklahoma’s land, water, and wildlife working for future generations. Top 10 Takeaways 1. The Oklahoma Conservation Commission exists to support practical, voluntary conservation across the state. 2. Local conservation districts are the foundation of the system and set priorities based on local needs. 3. Oklahoma has 84 conservation districts, not 77, because districts were formed by local need rather than county lines. 4. Upstream flood-control structures remain one of the agency’s biggest and most important long-term responsibilities. 5. The state cost-share program helps producers implement single practices with less paperwork and faster turnaround than many federal programs. 6. Water-quality work is one of OCC’s biggest success stories, with monitoring data driving conservation decisions and cleanup efforts. 7. Oklahoma leads the nation in EPA-recognized nonpoint source water-quality success stories, according to the guests. 8. Strong partnerships with OSU Extension, NRCS, conservation districts, prescribed burn associations, and other groups are a major reason Oklahoma gets results. 9. The agency is adapting to newer issues like soil health, wetlands, virtual fence adoption, brush control, and eastern redcedar expansion. 10. The future of conservation in Oklahoma depends on keeping it local, voluntary, practical, and rooted in common sense. Detailed Timestamped Rundown 00:00-02:22 Episode open, sponsor message, and introduction. The episode sets up a discussion on how the Oklahoma Conservation Commission supports conservation districts and practical conservation across Oklahoma. 02:31-03:22 John Weir welcomes guests Trey Lamb and Lisa Knopf-Owen and frames the discussion around the role of the Oklahoma Conservation Commission in the state. 03:22-06:40 Trey and Lisa share their personal backgrounds. Trey discusses his roots in farming, ranching, and conservation district leadership in Garvin County. Lisa shares her journey from Texas and Maine to Oklahoma and her long career with the Commission. 06:40-08:04 The conversation turns to prescribed fire partnerships. Lisa explains the Commission’s long partnership with the Oklahoma Prescribed Burn Association and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Partners Program, including help with equipment and support for burn associations. 08:04-10:29 Laura Goodman asks for clarification on the difference between conservation districts and the Oklahoma Conservation Commission. Trey and Lisa explain the historic, Dust Bowl-era development of locally led conservation and why districts were built to reflect local needs. 10:32-13:07 The guests review major historical programs, especially flood control. They describe how repeated flooding led to the small watershed program and the construction of numerous upstream structures to slow runoff and reduce damage. 13:07-17:19 Lisa and Trey explain other major programs, including district equipment rental, the long-running state cost-share program, soil health funding, wetlands work, and brush-control efforts. They emphasize that districts decide which practices best fit their local needs. 17:19-20:35 Mark Turner highlights the value of simpler paperwork and easier entry points for producers. Lisa explains the streamlined application process and the role of conservation district boards in ranking and approving projects. 20:35-24:23 The guests describe how conservation district boards work, how USDA service centers are staffed through partnerships, and why trust-based, voluntary conservation still matters. The discussion connects that model to prescribed burn associations and shared stewardship values. 24:23-27:58 Funding sources are discussed, including state appropriations, federal funding, grants, and limited local income. Lisa and Trey then highlight the water-quality program, including EPA 319 funding, long-term monitoring, and science-based conservation efforts. 27:58-31:05 Trey explains how data and outcomes now shape the agency’s overall approach. The discussion expands to community conservation, urban water education, Blue Thumb, and yard-by-yard soil health outreach. 31:05-36:23 The focus shifts back to flood-control structures, many of which are aging or changing hazard class because of development downstream. Lisa explains the complexity of rehabilitation projects, land rights, staffing shortages, and long timelines. 36:23-38:09 Laura Goodman discusses the virtual fence project and OCC’s willingness to adapt programs to new tools. Trey explains how the Commission added virtual fence as an eligible practice after seeing research and producer interest. 38:09-40:47 The guests talk about local outreach partnerships and a pilot project in Lincoln County that trains county commissioners to better manage unpaved roads. Trey explains how that work protects water quality and reduces sediment loss. 40:47-44:45 John, Laura, Trey, and Lisa reflect on how conservation affects both rural and urban Oklahoma. They discuss how partnerships across agencies and organizations make Oklahoma unusually effective at getting conservation work done. 44:45-47:32 Trey and Lisa talk about the future of the Oklahoma Conservation Commission. They stress keeping conservation locally driven, voluntary, and practical while addressing major challenges like eastern redcedar and water issues. 47:32-49:37 The guests share how listeners can connect with the Commission and local conservation districts. They emphasize that the agency will help direct citizens to answers and resources even when a question falls outside its exact scope. 49:41-50:05 Closing credits and reminder to visit the podcast website for more information. Find all resources at BlazinGrazinWildThings.com

17 de mar de 202649 min
episode Don’t Let Embers Take Everything - BGWT 201 artwork

Don’t Let Embers Take Everything - BGWT 201

This episode is made possible by support from the Oklahoma Conservation Commission. Wildfire preparedness isn’t just a checklist — it’s a resilience plan for your ranch, your family, and your community. In this episode of Blazin’ Grazin’ and Other Wild Things, hosts John Weir and Dr. Mark Turner talk with OSU Extension Agriculture and Food Policy specialist Amy Hagerman, Ph.D., about what to do before, during, and after a wildfire or other disaster. They cover practical steps that reduce loss (parking equipment on bare ground, shutting buildings to keep embers out, splitting hay into multiple locations, and keeping fence rows clean), plus the recovery side: how insurance documentation works, why you shouldn’t clean up before adjusters document damage, and which USDA disaster programs may help with livestock loss, fencing, hauling water, and hay-related needs.  The conversation also highlights a critical but often overlooked part of recovery: monitoring mental health in yourself and your neighbors long after the event. Top 10 takeaways (the “do this next” list) 1. Pick one high-impact task this weekend (don’t try to do everything at once). 2. Split hay into multiple locations — avoid one catastrophic pile loss. 3. Park equipment on bare ground or gravel (or mow/graze it tight). 4. Clean equipment (built-up grass and residue can ignite fast). 5. Shut doors on shops/barns during fire season to reduce ember entry. 6. Create an evacuation plan + go bag (papers, meds, chargers). 7. Digitize key records so “proof” survives the fire. 8. After a fire: document first, clean up second (insurance/program rules). 9. Know the big program lanes: livestock loss (LIP), fencing cost share (ECP), hay/water hauling and related support (ELAP). 10. Watch mental health long-term — stress often shows up later; check on neighbors. Timestamped Rundown 00:00 – 01:56 | Cold open + show setup Sponsor slate and show intro: “fire meets forage,” focus of episode is being prepared before/during/after disaster; guest intro. 01:56 – 03:40 | Meet the guest: roots + career path Amy Hagerman Ph.D. background: western Oklahoma, OSU ag econ, Texas A&M grad school, USDA experience, back to Oklahoma to serve producers. 03:40 – 06:34 | Why disaster policy matters Preparedness vs. recovery programs; why most incentives are reactive; costs of production make prevention hard; producer bears losses until reimbursement. 06:34 – 07:30 | Who does what: agencies + insurance NRCS as more proactive/conservation; FSA for recovery programs; insurance industry trends affect resilience. 07:30 – 11:27 | Wildfire preparedness: physical actions that matter Checklist mindset; protect barns/hay/equipment; park equipment on bare ground or short grass; clean equipment; don’t keep “all eggs in one basket” (hay); fence rows and tree cleanup. 11:27 – 13:58 | Insurance: get off autopilot Annual appointment with agent; update coverage for new barns/equipment; caps hit fast with today’s prices. 13:58 – 16:44 | Real-world examples of prevention paying off You don’t hear the success stories because they “kept rolling.” Spread hay, clean fence rows, planned cattle routes to bare ground. 16:44 – 19:15 | Land is resilient; people come first Great Plains adapted to fire; property loss is hardest; close doors to reduce ember entry; avoid risky last-ditch rescues. 19:15 – 23:17 | Evacuation planning + documentation basics Debris under porches; evacuation checklist; important papers, meds, chargers; after an event, call your agent first; don’t clean up until documented. 23:17 – 28:31 | Disaster programs overview (practical + specific) LIP (livestock deaths above normal mortality); documentation and proof of ownership; ECP for fencing (county activation; cost share; receipts; fixed rates); ELAP for hay/water hauling needs. 28:31 – 32:33 | Helping neighbors: donations + tax realities Charities vs person-to-person distribution centers; talk to your tax preparer; what tends to be deductible and what may not. 32:33 – 35:28 | OSU Extension DART: neighbors helping neighbors DART supports county educators with resources, people, answers; extension shines in preparedness/mitigation/recovery cycle. 35:28 – 38:55 | Tools to watch: fire danger + “muscle memory” Use online maps/tools, check conditions before welding or risky work; get documentation in place now; learn program rules ahead of time. 38:55 – 42:46 | Mental health after disaster Stress can hit weeks/months later; ask “are you OK?”; “be a bother”; community conversations matter; give yourself grace. 42:46 – 45:10 | Wrap + where to find resources OSU Extension emergency/disaster resource page; county educator; show notes and website plug. Find all resources at BlazinGrazinWildThings.com

4 de mar de 202644 min
episode Fence Rows, Hay Bales, and Hitchhiking Seeds - BGWT 118 artwork

Fence Rows, Hay Bales, and Hitchhiking Seeds - BGWT 118

Dr. Karen Hickman sits down with John Weir, Dr. Laura Goodman, and Dr. Mark Turner to talk invasive plants across the Great Plains—what’s here, what’s coming, and why our best defense often starts with a clean pickup, a better plant choice, and a tighter contract.  We walk through Callery/Bradford pear’s “overnight” takeover, Old World bluestem’s misnamed reputation, and how sericea, Johnson grass, privet, kudzu, honeysuckle, tree-of-heaven, Siberian elm and others move from roadsides to rangeland. You’ll hear field-tested tips: early detection/rapid response, where to scout first (gates, pens, ditches), what to tell pipeline and oilfield crews about decontamination, how hay can import problems after wildfire, and why tall, highly productive grasses (miscanthus, giant reed/cane, phragmites) pose wildfire risks on the urban–rural edge.  We wrap with Oklahoma’s watch lists, better native alternatives (hello, Mexican plum), and a clear message—don’t plant your problems. Top 10 takeaways 1. Callery/Bradford pear spreads fast once cross-pollinating varieties arrive—two fallow years can become a thicket. 2. Old World bluestem rides roads and rights-of-way; “bluestem” naming drives confusion with natives. 3. Johnson grass, sericea, privet, honeysuckle, kudzu, tree-of-heaven, Siberian elm remain priority species to control. 4. Focus early detection at high-traffic nodes: gates, pens, ditches, well pads, pipeline corridors. 5. Require equipment decontamination (power-wash, mud removal) in contracts with oil & gas, utility, and construction crews. 6. Be cautious with hay imports, especially after wildfire—weed seeds (and insects) ride along. 7. Avoid planting tall, high-biomass ornamentals (miscanthus, giant reed/cane, phragmites) near homes—wildfire risk. 8. Prefer native alternatives (e.g., Mexican plum instead of Callery pear); many ornamentals marketed as “sterile” aren’t. 9. Oklahoma needs clear, funded noxious-weed classes (A–C); enforcement without budget won’t work. 10. Knowledge + Extension wins: use watch lists, posters, and community education to “not plant your problems.”   Top 10 takeaways 00:00:01–00:01:25 | Intro & mission: fire meets forage; hosts & guest intro; subscribe + website. 00:02:02–00:04:22 | Hickman’s roots in Woods County; farming/ranching background; OSU roles. 00:04:49–00:09:08 | How invasives grabbed her attention (CRP “spar grass,” Old World bluestem); 1990s roadside changes. 00:08:54–00:10:11 | “Native encroacher” vs “invasive”; sericea & Johnson grass rising. 00:10:41–00:13:03 | Noxious weed laws 101; state differences (TX aquatic list, classes A–C in AZ/CO/NM/MO). 00:13:40–00:15:23 | Callery/Bradford pear goes from sterile to seedy; why it exploded. 00:16:44–00:17:19 | Jujube (Ziziphus) thickets; why mechanical control fails. 00:20:09–00:21:11 | “Bluestem” name confusion; WW/Spar lines; spread via rights-of-way. 00:31:03–00:31:11 | How WW/Spar got their names; OSU/Woodward history. 00:31:14–00:34:09 | OK Invasive Plant Council: Dirty Dozen poster, 140-species Watch List, filters by region/land use. 00:35:13–00:36:12 | “Top threats” statewide: Callery pear; fast conversion of fallow fields. 00:36:41–00:39:05 | Privet & Japanese honeysuckle; freeze + fire management anecdotes; native alternatives. 00:39:51–00:40:33 | Kudzu: buyer beware on “pretty vines.” 00:41:09–00:44:21 | Oklahoma policy: recent veto; why bills need experts, budgets, and classes (A–C). 00:44:41–00:47:21 | Looming issues: miscanthus, giant reed/cane, phragmites; wildfire implications. 00:49:05–00:50:27 | Where to scout first: pasture roads, gates, pens, ditches; how vehicles and oilfield traffic spread seed. 00:51:03–00:52:22 | Hay after wildfire: well-meant donations, unintended weeds & insects. Tagline needed! 00:52:49–00:53:09 | Final advice: avoid listed non-natives; natives bring more benefits. Close.   Find all resources at BlazinGrazinWildThings.com

10 de nov de 202553 min