Got Manure? Great Ideas for Manure Management

Alayne Blickle from Horses for Clean Water will present on how to manage your horse and livestock manure to keep our streams clean.

Please fill out our survey after you watch to give us feedback on the presentation, help us track our successes for our grantors, and to sign up to receive an intake site visit and a free tarp.

This is the first of a three-part webinar series, Manure Matters. To learn more about manure management visit our new program’s website, PoopSmartClark.org

When you attend one of these webinars you are eligible for a free tarp and intake site visit (tarps open to Clark County residents only). Tarps must be used only for covering manure piles to protect water quality. To get your name on the list for a site visit, sign up today by filling out a post-event survey. If you missed the live event, you can still qualify for a site visit and tarp by watching the webinar recording and filling out a post-event survey, or by watching one of the other Manure Matters webinars. Tarps are available while supplies last.

About our Presenter:

Alayne Blickle is an accomplished horsewoman and educator who works with horse and small acreage livestock owners teaching horse keeping and land management practices. Her undergraduate studies were in psychology and natural sciences and she has a graduate degree in communications. She keeps her training current in the areas of sustainable agronomy, natural resource management, rangeland ecology, soil health, and equine science. As an entrepreneurial businesswoman, she has been a pioneer in the field of horse keeping and land management. In the mid-90’s she created her own consulting business, Horses for Clean Water, which she continues today through her work partnering with natural resource agencies and horse organizations. Alayne has traveled and taught throughout North America and (thanks to Zoom!) reaches audiences worldwide. She is a regularly contributing writer/photojournalist to publications including The Horse magazine, TheHorse.com, and Northwest Horse Source. Contact her at alayne@horsesforcleanwater.com or via the Horses for Clean Water website or her ranch website Sweet Pepper Ranch.

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