
For more information contact:
Montana Stockgrowers Association
406-442-3420
March 27, 2008
For Immediate Release
Close to
90,000 Acres of Montana Rangeland
Added to
Certified “Undaunted Land Stewards”
Participation,
Interest in Montana’s Undaunted Stewardship
Program
Continues to Grow
Almost
90,000 acres of Montana rangeland, from
six different ranches around the state, have now been added to the “certified”
category of involvement in the nationally unique Undaunted Stewardship® program.
The owners and managers of these lands can call themselves “Undaunted Land Stewards” –participants in the program that is preserving historic sites along the Lewis and Clark Trail and helping ranch families improve both the stewardship and the economic performance of their ranches.
The seven newly certified
ranches collectively contain 85,237 acres and are located all over Montana, from
Highwood to Ekalaka.
Managed jointly by Montana
State University, the federal Bureau of Land Management and the Montana
Stockgrowers Association, Undaunted
Stewardship® has earned national recognition for its unique approach to
stewardship and historic site preservation. A guidance council representing
various conservation, agricultural, and other Montana groups helps oversee the
multi-faceted program.
To participate as “Undaunted
Land Stewards,” ranches have to meet a series of grazing and other land
management standards that ensure the long-term sustainability and productivity
of their ranch lands.
Before a ranch can become
certified as an “Undaunted Land Steward,” it must use a grazing management
approach that is documented and monitored, with a written prescription for land
management that protects the natural resources. These ranchers are demonstrating
how ranching can maintain natural productivity, and sustain it for generations
to come.
Carl Wambolt directs the Undaunted Stewardship® land use program
and coordinates a team of range scientists at Montana State University-Bozeman.
The team visits, inventories the ranch, and helps the ranchers develop written
grazing plans. They also help each rancher establish a range monitoring program
to collect baseline data that ranchers can use to judge, refine, and
continually improve their land management.
“Through the Undaunted Stewardship® program, we’re
assisting ranchers all over Montana to continue being superior undaunted land
stewards,” said Carl Wambolt. “There’s no other voluntary, incentive-based,
private-land stewardship program like this in the nation.”
The ranches that have
recently completed the certification process are:
Keewaydin Ranch Big Timber
Wickens Salt Creek Ranch Hilger
Jenni Ranch Lewistown
Gies Ranch Lewistown
Comes Angus Ranch Lewistown
Schipf-Swan Ranch Highwood
Clark Ranch Winston
Meyer Ranch Ekalaka
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