This prestigious award recognizes organic farmers in the Midwest
who practice outstanding land stewardship, innovation and outreach.
Recipients are chosen by the board of the Midwest Organic &
Sustainable Education Service (MOSES), which organizes the annual
conference on organic and sustainable farming practices. This is the
15th year of the award.
Dave Bishop, his son Hans, and Hans’ wife, Katie run PrairiErth
Farm, a 300-acre farm with diverse crops and livestock. The farm has
been certified organic since 2004. The Bishops grow organic corn,
soybeans, oats, wheat, livestock forages, vegetables, fruit, and
flowers. The farm also produces organic beef, pork, eggs and honey.
The family sells at local farmers’ markets and to restaurants and
stores. They also offer a vegetable CSA that provides members with a
weekly box of produce from May through October. They have a winter
CSA, too, which is packed with root vegetables, salad supplies, and
more.
This diverse mix of crops and livestock is the foundation of the
healthy soil on the farm, Dave Bishop explained. The Bishops rely on
cover crops and manure, spread by their livestock or applied to
fields as stabilized compost, rather than chemical fertilizers to
yield bountiful, nutrient-dense crops.
“Cover crops keep the engine in the soil running, building fertility
and organic matter, and sequestering nutrients that might otherwise
end up as runoff,” Dave explained. “Chemicals secreted by certain
cover crops suppress the germination of weeds and reduce various
diseases and pathogens. Adding a ‘crop’ of livestock will keep the
land productive late fall through winter,” he added, explaining how
the Bishops will graze their cattle in the field of recently
harvested wheat in late summer, and move them to the corn and rye
fields for winter.
PrairiErth Farm has been participating in research with the
University of Illinois for many years. Current research is studying
the impact of various cover crop mixtures on weed suppression, soil
microbial activity, and field productivity.
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The Bishops are passionate about growing organically, a system Dave adopted
after years of conventional farming. Dave said he sees organic farming as a way
to limit “our ecological footprint by caring for the earth, not just for us, but
for future generations.” They’ve reduced their “footprint” even further by using
solar-powered pasture fencing and livestock watering systems.
The family has hosted on-farm events to show other farmers how their rotations
and sustainable farming system work. Hans has been a mentor to new organic
farmers through the MOSES Farmer-To-Farmer Mentoring Program. The Bishops also
provide educational tours of the farm for local school children and other civic
groups.
Dave is president of the Illinois Local Foods, Farms and Jobs Council. Hans
serves on the advisory board for the Downtown Bloomington Farmers’ Market and
Artist Alley, and on the board of the Illinois Growers’ Association. Katie
teaches workshops on marketing and social media at farming conferences,
including the MOSES Conference. She is also the author of PrairiErth Farm
Cookbook.
The Organic Farmer of the Year award is a project of MOSES, which is a nonprofit
organization that promotes organic and sustainable agriculture by providing
farmers with education, resources, and practical advice. For more information,
see mosesorganic.org.
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