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Aerial views of Forever Grateful Ranch where owner Jim Chew grows pistachios with a little help from U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Natural Resources and Conservation Service (NRCS), in the form of micro-sprinklers, a moisture meter, and implemented nutrient management with ground cover plants and compost, on Nov 19, 2018, in Chowchilla, CA. Chowchilla is 150 miles east-southeast of San Francisco.

Mr. Chew grew up 20 miles north in Stevenson, CA where his father raised beef-cows. He then attended Modesto Junior College. After receiving an associate degree, he joined the Peace Corps who sent him to Africa. While there Chew developed a 4-H program in Lobatse, Botswana, where he taught and supervised modern swineherd management, and sustenance family farming plots. In the suburbs, about 90 miles northwest of Johannesburg, he operated a feeding program that provided meals and soap for those in need. He returned to California and Fresno State University to study plant and animal sciences. But, before long he headed to Richmond, CA to be with his future wife, Maryam. While there he began studies in engineering and graduated with a Bachelor of Engineering. For the next 15-years, he was an engineer for the cities of San Francisco and then Pinole. Throughout that time he was a single foster parent to 15 children. Saving money from his civil service employment allowed him to move back to the Merced County area and purchase this home and orchard. Now disabled and receives help from USDA Agribility. Work on the pistachio farm varies through the seasons, this week he used an NRCS provided moisture meter to measure the water pressure before his son applies 10 tons per acre of compost to hold in moisture and deliver nutrients to the trees over the winter. However, first, he and his son Sonny will prepare his tractor for the task of pull a large blower that will remove fallen leaves from the orchard. These tasks and just getting around the farm are his greatest daily challenges with his prosthetic leg. Jim’s grandfather, a Texas farmer, started the tradition of farming that Sonny hopes to carry on. For now, he works long hours to learn all he can from his father, and his realtor mother Maryam who handles the accounting. Chew’s advice to would-be farmers is to “get up in the morning and get going…; work for it…; expect long hard hours of work…; read up on the latest farming technologies… and ways the government can help you, and you can help the country.”He works closely with his local NRCS soil conservationist Priscilla Baker for his conservation plan that includes a bromegrass between his rows of trees Mr. Chew considers a good day as the day that harvest trucks leave with loads of his pistachios. He takes great pride in providing a popular food for people. Farm Production and Conservation (FPAC) is the Department’s focal point for the nation’s farmers and ranchers and other stewards of private agricultural lands and non-industrial private forest lands. FPAC agencies implement programs designed to mitigate the significant risks of farming through crop insurance services, conservation programs, and technical assistance, and commodity, lending, and disaster programs.The agencies and service supporting FPAC are Farm Service Agency (FSA), Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), and Risk Management Agency (RMA). Natural Resources Conservation Service has a proud history of supporting America’s farmers, ranchers, and forest landowners. For more than 80 years, we have helped people make investments in their operations and local communities to keep working lands working, boost rural economies, increase the competitiveness of American agriculture, and improve the quality of our air, water, soil, and habitat. As the USDA’s primary private lands conservation agency, we generate, manage, and share the data, technology, and standards that enable partners and policymakers to make decisions informed by objective, reliable science. Also, through one-on-one, personalized advice, we work voluntarily with producers and communities to find the best solutions to meet their unique conservation and business goals. By doing so, we help ensure the health of our natural resources and the long-term sustainability of American agriculture.For more information, please see www.usda.gov.For more information about AgrAbility, please see https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/PA_NRCSConsumption/download?cid...ext=pdf, and https://nifa.usda.gov/program/agrability USDA Photo by Lance Cheung.

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Aerial views of Forever Grateful Ranch where owner Jim Chew grows pistachios with a little help from U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Natural Resources and Conservation Service (NRCS), in the form of micro-sprinklers, a moisture meter, and implemented nutrient management with ground cover plants and compost, on Nov 19, 2018, in Chowchilla, CA. Chowchilla is 150 miles east-southeast of San Francisco.

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