Farm Management Course for Women Starts Aug. 27 at Douglas County Sale Barn in Squires, Mo.
Contact:
Angie Fletcher, human development specialist
Tel:
417-683-4409
E-mail:
fletchera@missouri.edu
AVA, Mo. -- University of Missouri Extension is offering
a series of farm management courses in Douglas County designed just for women –
known as Annie’s Project –starting Aug. 27.
“The course should be of particular interest to women who want to learn
how to run a farm as a business,” said Stacy
Hambelton, an agriculture business specialist with MU
Extension. “But it is also good for those that want to do a better job of
marketing or need to learn how to pass the farm on to the next generation.”
The Annie's Project course includes six evening classes on:
Aug. 27, Sept. 10, Sept. 24, and Oct. 1, Oct. 8 and Oct. 15. The classes will
be held from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. at Douglas County Sale Barn in Squires, Mo.
Class size will be limited to the first 20 women who
register to ensure good group interaction and one-on-one assistance. For more
information, call the Douglas County Extension Center at 417-683-4409 or the
brochure is available online at www.extension.missouri.edu/douglas .
ANNIE’S PROJECT
Annie’s Project began with a farm wife who grew up
in northern Illinois. She spent her life learning how to be an involved
business partner with her husband. This course takes Annie’s experience and
shares it with farm women so they can be better business partners.
According to Hambelton, agriculture business specialist with
University of Missouri Extension, the
course provides mentoring for farm women with varying levels of business
skills.
“Women who are new to a farm business may be afraid to
ask questions. Women who are accustomed to the farm business may feel helpless
with new technologies. A program like this gets those two groups together and
collectively finds solutions,” said Hambelton.
The goal is to empower farm women and help them make better management
decisions through networking and by using critical financial information. The course is to provide
mentoring for farm women with varying levels of business skills.
COURSE TOPICS
Course topics will include:
learning to communicate and work with each of the four basic personality
types, economics of land ownership, farm record keeping and taxes, business
plans, pasture rental contracts, how property is titled, insurance needs,
financial statements, retirement and estate planning, farm succession planning
for the next generation, using computers and the internet on the farm,
understanding Missouri fence laws, livestock marketing and risk management,
keys to being a profitable livestock producer, and more.
The course will be taught by MU Extension specialists and special guest
speakers.
The class is
being partially funded by a grant from the North Central Risk Management
Center.
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