What is the Cooperative Extension Service?
Have you ever wondered what services the Cooperative Extension Service offers? How is the Cooperative Extension service associated with the University of Arkansas? Where does all of the information come from? How does the Cooperative Extension Service benefit the residents of Garland County?
Our Mission: The Cooperative Extension Service, University of Arkansas, helps people improve their lives through an educational process that uses researched-based knowledge focused on issues and needs.
U of A-Division of Agriculture: Is dedicated to improving the lives of Arkansans by generating knowledge through research and putting that knowledge to use through education. Research is conducted in laboratories at the four university system campuses and at experiment station farms throughout the state. The Cooperative Extension Service educational classrooms are not limited to bricks and mortar but are found in open fields, gardens, homes, and community offices.
There are three main areas of research-based information: Agriculture/ Natural Resources; Family and Consumer Sciences; and 4-H and Youth Development. The Garland County Cooperative Extension Service strives to meet the unique needs of each of our residents.
There are over 1,500 publications that are free to browse or print off on our website at http://www.uaex.edu/publications/. They are researched based and written by Extension professionals on a wide variety of topics ranging from Youth Development to Home Gardening to Livestock Production.
Some of the other services and information available through the Extension Office include the following:
• Soil testing and more. Many gardeners know soil testing provides vital information to help with the gardening experience. It is not just for vegetable gardens. The management of lawns, pastures, shrubs, flower beds and orchards can be enhanced with periodic soil testing every few years. A soil test provides information about the pH, (a measure of acidity or alkalinity), nutrients, and a recommendation on the amount and kind of fertilizer and/or lime needed, if any. Each sample should be representative of the area being tested. Bring enough soil in for us to fill a pint container. We send it to our soil lab in Marianna and it usually takes two to three weeks to receive your results. The soil you bring in must be just that — soil — our lab does not process potting medium. This is a free service.
• Water testing for a variety of purposes is offered through the Extension Office and is conducted by the Water Quality Laboratory at the University of Arkansas. Packages are available for domestic water quality, livestock, irrigation, fish ponds, and poultry, as well as specific individual tests. Costs are associated with these tests and vary according to the type of test you are needing to have done. The tests start at $85 and go up. The water kit must be picked up at the Extension Office, and the kit comes with a heavy-duty bottle, the mailing box, and instructions. You then mail your sample and check directly to the Water Quality Lab, who performs the analysis and mails the results directly to you.
Note: The water testing service is to determine component analysis only, it is not to determine if your water is safe to drink.
• Plant disease is another area we receive a lot of calls from mostly of which we can usually identify, however, when necessary, we may send a sample of the diseased plant to our Plant Pathology Lab in Fayetteville for an analysis. This is also a free service.
If you have a question about any of the services that the Cooperative Extension Service offers visit our website at http://www. uaex.edu and follow the links to a wealth of information from livestock to agriculture, to gardening, family and consumer science topics, exercise, etc. You’re sure to find something of interest.
Master Gardeners
Master Gardener volunteers grow people! Master Gardeners receive 40 hours of training in general horticulture from experts in their field. Then, they volunteer at least 40 hours of their time in Master Gardener projects. There are additional educational and social opportunities, too. For more information on becoming a Master Gardener, call Alex Dykes on 623-6841.
EHC information
Would you be interested in joining an existing Extension Homemaker’s Club? Or better yet, would you and a group of your friends like to organize a club in your community? For more information about the EHC program, call Alison Crane at 623-6841.
4-H information
If you’re between the ages of 5 and 19, you can join 4-H! We have a club for you, or you and a group of friends can organize a club of your own. For more information on the 4-H program, call Carol Ann McAfee at 623-6841.