News

AoR 183: Rangelands on Display – Using Public Art to Reach Beyond the Choir, with Stephen Bramwell

What if the key to making people care about rangelands wasn’t a fact sheet, a policy brief, or even a podcast — but interactive art that people can view, hear, touch, and smell? WSU Extension’s Stephen Bramwell joins the show to talk about a first-of-its-kind public art project that’s deploying multisensory exhibits across 18 states […]

Woman on rangeland with birds and cattle and pollinators

AoR 182: Allen Miller on Fire, Fence, and Family – 140 Years of Stewardship at Tower Rock Ranch

Allen Miller of Tower Rock Ranch in Mansfield, Washington was the 2023 NCBA Environmental Stewardship Award regional winner. His family has run cattle on the same Douglas County ground since 1883. Allen joins Tip to talk about blending the art and science of range management on a 15,000-acre operation reshaped by five major wildfires in […]

Allen Miller receiving Environmental Stewardship Award

AoR 181: Jim Strickland, Keeping Florida Ranches Ahead of the Bulldozer

Jim Strickland is managing partner at Blackbeard’s Ranch in southwest Florida, co-founder of the Florida Conservation Group, and vice chair of the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association Environmental Stewardship Award Program. Over a seventy-year career in cattle, Jim watched nearly 100,000 acres of leased pasture disappear to development around Sarasota, and in response he helped build […]

Jim Strickland

IYRP March: Maryam Niamir-Fuller on Economic Services of Global Rangelands

Maryam Niamir-Fuller’s career spans decades of work with pastoralist communities from all over the world. She is a special advisor to the Secretariat of the International Year of Rangelands and Pastoralists Global Alliance. Maryam shares how her journey began among the Dinka people of Southern Sudan and grew into a lifelong commitment to elevating the […]

International Year of Rangelands & Pastoralists 2026 logo

AoR 180: Doug Poole on Integrating Grazing into Cropping Systems for Rangeland & Soil Health

In this episode, host Tip Hudson speaks with Doug Poole, a third-generation dryland farmer in Eastern Washington’s arid Columbia Basin, about his decade-long effort to reintegrate livestock into a cropping system that had largely abandoned them. Doug farms on just 8–10 inches of annual rainfall, and the conversation digs into how industrial row-crop agriculture — […]

Bee feeding on lupine flowers

AoR 179: Glenn Elzinga, Alderspring Ranch – Grassfed Beef in Wild, Open Spaces

Storytelling, direct-to-consumer beef sales, animal behavior, grass taxonomy, beavers, water, and wolves. Glenn Elzinga has tried to tackle it all raising cattle in the Pahsimeroi Valley and nearby mountains of south-central Idaho. Alderspring is a 100% grass-fed and certified organic ranch that’s been raising cattle on wild rangelands for over 30 years. Glenn, Caryl, and […]

AoR 178: Flavie Audoin on Animal Geolocation and Virtual Fence Technologies

Just when you thought you’d heard everything about virtual fence, another podcast episode comes along. But Dr. Flavie Audoin, University of Arizona Cooperative Extension rangeland specialist, may be one of the most importance “voices” to listen to on the strengths and weaknesses of virtual fence and animal geolocation technologies. She has been in the middle […]

IYRP February: Mark Moritz on Pastoralist Mobility, Land & Water Security

Pastoral mobility is crucial for both the sustainable management of rangelands and the economic viability of pastoralism. It is key to livestock productivity, because it enables herds to reach resources that are unevenly dispersed across space and are often short-lived in highly variable environments. Pastoralists specialize in guiding their herds through seasonal grazing of a […]

Herders organizing a large flock of sheep in a fenced pasture.

AoR 177: Betsey Boughton on Ranch-Relevant Ecological Research at Archbold Biological Station

“Archbold’s mission is to build and share the scientific knowledge needed to protect the life, lands, and waters of the heart of Florida, and beyond.” This quote from the Archbold Biological Station website describes well the impressive efforts of this large private research institute to integrate wildlife and ecosystem conservation efforts with ranch management. Ranches […]

AoR 176: Gene Lollis with Buck Island Ranch, part of Archbold Biological Station

Gene Lollis has been managing the Buck Island Ranch for both commercial cattle production and research objectives for over 30 years. In this interview, Gene covers carbon life cycle analysis and eddy covariance sensors, meat packer politics, endangered bird species, Florida feedlot rations, rotational grazing, and national security. Welcome to a day in the life […]

Gene Lollis