Paul Muller and Dru Rivers, partners of Full Belly Farm, an organic farm in Capay Valley in Northern California, will be the keynote speakers of the New Mexico Organic Farming Conference luncheon on Saturday, Feb. 18. The conference will be Friday and Saturday, Feb. 17-18, at the Marriott Albuquerque Pyramid North hotel. (Courtesy photo)

WRITER: Jane Moorman, 505-249-0527, jmoorman@nmsu.edu
CONTACT: Patrick Torres , 505-983-4615, patorres@nmsu.edu

ALBUQUERQUE - The New Mexico Organic Farming Conference, to be held Friday and Saturday, Feb. 17-18, at the Marriott Pyramid North in Albuquerque, is the Southwest's premier conference for organic and sustainable agriculture.

Averaging more than 650 participants annually, the conference provides a wide range of information for organic, and conventional, farm operations.

The event is organized by New Mexico State University's Cooperative Extension Service, New Mexico Department of Agriculture, New Mexico Farm & Livestock Bureau and Green Tractor Farms.

GǣOrganic farming is a growing sector of New Mexico's agricultural industry,Gǥ said Patrick Torres, NMSU Cooperative Extension Service northern district department head. GǣThis conference provides farmers information that can help their operations to prosper.Gǥ

The keynote speaker at the Saturday luncheon, which features an organic food menu, will be Paul Muller and Dru Rivers, partners in Full Belly Farm in Capay Valley in Northern California.

During the past 32 years, Full Belly Farm has strived to evolve a farm system that would serve as a healthy alternative to the conventional farm model. As partners, Muller and Rivers have helped create a 450-acre diversified organic farm that focuses on local/regional marketing; diverse cropping patterns; ecological health and diversity; soil building; carbon sequestration through cover crop management; innovative market strategies; growing new farmers through internships and new farm enterprises; and fostering vibrancy and beauty.

The farm received the prestigious Aldo Leopold Award in 2014 for outstanding conservation measures practiced on a farm.

During the two-day conference, 35 workshop sessions will focus on a variety of topics ranging from crop production, soil health, business planning and regulations impacting organic farming presented by NMSU Extension specialists and researchers, federal agency representatives, industrial experts and agricultural producers.

A fair with 38 exhibitors will share additional information with participants.

Among the workshops on Friday will be a session on hops presented by Rob Sirrine, Michigan State University senior Extension educator and co-founding member of the Great Lakes Hops Working Group. He will give an overview of hops production, including setup, trellising, fertility, pest and disease control, and basic cost information.

Continuing Education Unit credits for pesticide applicators and certified crop advisers will be available for some sessions. Master Gardener CEUs are not available.

Registration for both days of the conference is $110, individual days is $70. The Saturday luncheon is included for the first 650 to register. Registration after Feb. 1 may be done online at nmofc.eventbrite.com. For more information call 505-490-2822 or email sagefaulkner@yahoo.com.

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