Range Science

Do you love the great outdoors? If so, this project is for you! You’ll learn how to manage land, natural resources, and the environment. You can learn about your environment, and the responsibility you have for natural resources, and the connections between plants, animals, soil, and water. This is a great project for someone who wants to own a ranch or manage land that produces renewable goods and services for humans.

The Range Science project promotes and develops knowledge and skills in practical range, natural resource and ranch management. Projected costs are low to medium.

Topics include:

  • Ranchland management
  • Water and how plants grow
  • Vegetation areas of Texas
  • Brush control and weed control
  • Poisonous or toxic plants
  • Grazing management strategies
  • Ranch management practices and leasing rangeland
  • Risk management for land
  • How domestic grazing animals and wildlife species eat

The Master Plant List names and gives characteristics of 129 range and pasture plants used in the 4-H Range and Pasture Grass Identification Contest, 4-H Range Evaluation Contest and the major livestock show Range and Pasture Plant Identification contests at Houston, Fort Worth, Dallas State Fair, the Amarillo Tri-State Fair and 4-H open contests.

Contests

Stephens County 4-H offers two competitive programs in Range Science both coached by Jerry Corbett! Ms. Jerry has led many teams to state and national titles.

Team practice time: Tuesdays & Thursdays 5:15pm

Team practice location: Stephens County Extension Office

Range and Pasture Grass Identification Contest

You will learn to identify all of the 74 native and introduced grasses which are listed on the Master Plant List for 4-H. The grasses in the grass contest are important for their value in making decisions about the Texas forage resources, their health, and help to determine the change that has occurred on our land base in Texas. You will learn how plants grow, grazing impacts on land, grass and plant identification and examination. Visit the State Roundup webpage to learn more.

Range Evaluation Contest

The next step after you have learned the grass and plant types! The 4-H judging program concentrates on making decisions about the rangeland resource including ecological site health determination, stocking rate, and the use of management tools to benefit the forage, soil, water, and livestock/wildlife resources. You will learn about grazing distribution, season of forage use, kinds and classes of livestock and stocking rate. And then actually calculate a current stocking rate for the given situation. The key to success in this contest relies on your ability to identify plants and have knowledge of their ecological and economic value. The 4-H Range Evaluation Contest is conducted totally outdoors

 

Click here for more information!

 

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