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No Till Farming: Protecting and Preserving the Land

How one Ohio grain farmer and his son parked their plow to protect the land.

// Cooperative Stories, Customer Stories

In the late 1970s, customer-owner Joe noticed a neighbor was testing out a new approach to farming: planting without tilling the land. His interest was piqued.

The fifth-generation grain farmer watched closely over the next few years as his neighbor continued to successfully grow crops without plowing. In 1982, Joe tested the no-till method at Beam Springs, a family-owned corn and soybean operation nestled in a lush southwestern Ohio valley.

“We certainly felt like it was promising enough that it was worth continuing,” Joe shared. “By 1985, we were 100 percent no-till.”

With minimal disturbance to the land and to the organisms living in the soil, no-till plowing results in a host of environmental benefits, such as reduced erosion, increased water filtration, nutrient retention and healthier soil. It’s now been 35 years since the family fully adopted the no-till technique and they are reaping the benefits. Number one on their list being that virtually no soil erosion on their farm and previously degraded soils have largely been restored.

“For me, it’s exciting to get up and see the progress we’re making regenerating our soils,” says Mike, who runs the farm alongside his father, Joe. Soil is their biggest resource, he added, and it’s much easier to lose than it is to rebuild.

“That’s a big deal to me,” Mike said. “I don’t take that lightly.”

The family is committed to protecting and even enhancing the land on which their family has proudly farmed for five generations.


Farm Credit Mid-America territory includes Arkansas, Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri, Ohio and Tennessee. Arkansas includes Clay, Craighead, Crittenden, Cross, Desha (northeast of the White River), Greene, Lee, Mississippi, Phillips, Poinsett, and St. Francis counties. Missouri includes Carter, Ripley and Wayne counties. Kentucky excludes Ballard, Calloway, Carlisle, Fulton, Graves, Hickman, Marshall and McCracken counties. Ohio excludes Crawford, Hancock, Lucas, Marion, Ottawa, Sandusky, Seneca, Wood and Wyandot counties. We serve all counties in Indiana and Tennessee. 

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