An Overview Of Our Solution
- Population Impacted:
- Continent: North America
Organization type
Population impacted
Size of agricultural area
Production quantity
People employed
Describe your solution
Describe your implementation
External connections
What is the environmental or ecological challenge you are targeting with your solution?
Describe the context in which you are operating
Habitat Farm is situated along the Salmon River, 3.5 km south of the lightly populated, unincorporated settlement of Falkand, British Columbia, Canada, in the Moist Warm Sub-Zone of the Interior Douglas Fir Biogeoclimatic Zone. The farm’s elevation ranges from 550M to 750M. The farm is one of many occupying the valley bottom where principally livestock and hay is grown on century-ago cleared land.
Many farmers continue to be employed in the logging industry to augment their farm incomes.
Falkland has one school, one gas station, one motel, 1 ½ restaurants, a pub and about 600 residents.
The forest comprises mostly Western Red Cedar, Douglas Fir, western larch, paper birch, cottonwood, and moist soil shrubs.
The soils types are primarily brunisols and luvisols with poorly formed horizons and thin organic layers.
The farm contains five springs, one of which, at 60 gpm, serves domestic, livestock and some watering needs. During summer this spring is partially diverted into a catch basin, the seep from which helps maintain a grass regime in the alluvial fan below. The remaining springs are uncontained.
Identified fauna include over 100 bird species, 32 species of mammals, including bear, cougar, coyote, deer, moose, beaver, otter, raccoon, rabbit, shrews and voles. The river is a spawning ground for salmon, trout, sucker and a variety of true minnows and sculpins, frogs, turtles and salamanders. It is a rich ecosystem.
How did you impact natural resource use and greenhouse gas emissions?
Social/Community
Water
Food Security/Nutrition
Economic/Sustainable Development
Climate
Sustainability
Habitat Farm has no debts. It is bought and paid for. It provides a modest return from lamb sales and the sale of woolen products manufactured on-farm from the annual wool clip plus wool bought and custom production for other wool producers. It relies on no grant funding. The forester’s assessment was personally bought. The riparian and fisheries work was part of a larger set of community projects. The farm donated land for the imprinting ponds.