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Tales of an Intrepid Journeyman (to Vietnam)

Upon my return from Vietnam – by all accounts an ascendant “Asian Tiger” economically and culturally – I was asked a number questions, including the following: Were Vestiges of the Communist System Still Evident? This is front and center on most minds. Propaganda was plastered everywhere in the city, emblazoned with Ho Chi Minh -… Continue reading Tales of an Intrepid Journeyman (to Vietnam)

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Southwest Virginia: An Exercise in Contrasts

As the only aggie in a high school graduating class of 330, urban-edge agriculture resonates very strongly with me. Outside observers may dub it a curious novelty and question your sanity (who would *want* to cultivate crops when there are houses aplenty to grow), but there’s nothing especially peculiar about agriculture on the fringes of… Continue reading Southwest Virginia: An Exercise in Contrasts

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Ag Inclusivity: No Farmer Left Behind

At a faculty meeting the other day, we considered the idea of educational inclusivity. Ferrum College is a composite of 1) traditional students, 2) nontraditional students (mid-career professionals looking to polish and/or reorient their skillsets), and 3) minority students (~40%). Of these demographics, most can be more broadly considered first generation. How do we cater… Continue reading Ag Inclusivity: No Farmer Left Behind

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360 Degrees: Advocating for Agriculture

As an undergraduate, I was tasked with a reading from the provocatively titled book Saving the Planet With Pesticides and Plastics by Dennis Avery. Despite my farm upbringing, I was solidly convinced that pesticides were a “necessary evil”. No question – this was an established, irrefutable fact. I delved into the chapters with a great… Continue reading 360 Degrees: Advocating for Agriculture

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Tidewater and Eastern Shore: Internationalization Aplenty

Agriculture in the Tidewater/Eastern Shore region holds a special place for me as a Virginia "transplant" - it's very similar to my family's homestead. The terrain is flat - no undulating hills and mountains like those in Franklin County (my adopted home in VA), and less clay (aka “red dirt”). It's this geographical uniqueness that… Continue reading Tidewater and Eastern Shore: Internationalization Aplenty

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An Ag Transplant From New York and Naturalized Virginian

I graduated from the University of Florida with a degree in Plant Medicine, the equivalent of a "plant M.D." (http://dpm.ifas.ufl.edu) I’m currently the Agriculture Program Coordinator and Assistant Professor of Agronomy at Ferrum College, a small liberal arts college in the picturesque foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains: (http://www.ferrum.edu/academics/schools/natural_sciences_math/agriculture.html) In the academic offseason, I work the… Continue reading An Ag Transplant From New York and Naturalized Virginian