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PREEC Recognizes Farmers and Agriculturalist at Annual P.A.R.T.T.

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Trent Benzel, left, Steve Benzel and Michael Ann Relka were co-recipients of PREECโ€™s 2024 Outstanding Service to the Panhandle Agriculture award. Not pictured Carl Benzel. Photo by Chabella Guzman

By Chabella Guzman, PREEC Communications

The University of Nebraska -Lincolnโ€™s Panhandle Research Extension and Education Center (PREEC) awarded a family and an individual its 2024 Outstanding Service to Panhandle Agriculture award on Thursday, Aug. 22, at the annual Panhandle Agriculture Research Technology Tour. 

Michael Ann Relka

Michael Ann Relka, left, agriculturalist at Western Sugar, was a co-recipient of PREECโ€™s 2024 Outstanding Service to the Panhandle Agriculture award. She received the award at P.A.R.T.T. from John Westra, director of the Center in Scottsbluff. Photo by Chabella Guzman

Relka has been the agriculturist at Western Sugar Cooperative since 2009. She has the largest growing area and runs the largest sugar beet receiving station in the cooperative. โ€œHer growers respect her opinions on their crop and ask her for advice on raising sugar beets,โ€ said Jerry Darnell, vice president of agriculture, south region for Western Sugar.

As an agriculturist for Western Sugar Relka has many opportunities to educate others about sugar beets and to work with the community to promote agriculture. Relka has been a part of ag in the classroom for several years, teaching kids in other areas about sugar beets. She led the Beet Sugar Development Foundation AG school at Scottsbluff High School last year. Her pursuit to bring agriculture to the public doesnโ€™t stop at the classroom or with the growers. She has been integral to research at the Panhandle Research Extension and Education Center in Scottsbluff. 

โ€œOver the last few years, I have placed a couple On-Farm trials locally, and Michael Ann has been great at finding growers willing to work with me. And this is really hard to do. As a Weed Scientist, if I am going to be putting a trial out in a farmerโ€™s field, I will be leaving a substantial mess,โ€ said Nevin Lawrence, Nebraska Extension integrated weed management specialist. โ€œWe canโ€™t just test what works, we need to compare weed control programs to the standard to see if it does better. Most of the time, when a trial ends, I am leaving the grower with quite a few six-foot-tall weeds and diminished yields on the part of the field they allow me to use.โ€ Relka has also worked with PREEC faculty on the Yonts Conference and other sugar beet projects. 

She grew up on a farm outside of Scottsbluff participated in 4-H and helped with tractor work and setting water growing up. After graduating high school, Relka majored in Ag Business and added Soil and Crop Sciences. 

โ€œIn the spring of 2010 my dad was beginning to downsize his farming operation, which provided me the opportunity to rent 80 acres and start doing some farming and working at Western Sugar,โ€ Relka said. โ€œMy husband and I have grown the farming operation to his full-time occupation, where we now raise our family on some of the same farms I grew up on. Iโ€™ve always appreciated being able to see agriculture from both the industry and production perspectives and feel that it helps inform my decisions and the recommendations I give others.โ€

Steve, Trent, and Carl Benzel

The Benzel brothers were co-recipients of PREECโ€™s 2024 Outstanding Service to the Panhandle Agriculture award. From left: John Thomas, Nebraska Extension educator, Trent Benzel, Center Director John Westra, Steve Benzel, and Gary Stone, Nebraska Extension educator. Not pictured Carl Benzel. The brothers were nominated by Thomas and Stone. Photo by Chabella Guzman

The brothers were born and raised in Box Butte County and have farmed all their lives. On the 900 irrigated and 500 dryland acres. The Benzels have grown corn, sugar beets, dry beans, winter wheat, yellow peas, oats, and garbanzo beans. They also work with various cover crops to improve soil conservation and health.

โ€œThey are outstanding supporters and contributors to the Nebraska Extension On-Farm research program,โ€ said Gary Stone, Nebraska Extension educator, water & integrated cropping systems. โ€œAlong with irrigation water management utilizing ET gages and crop water use. They participate in Nebraska Extension and dry bean industry variety trials and implementation of new products. 

Steve has served on the Nebraska Dry Bean Commission and Nebraska Sugar Beet Growers Association and is on the Box Butte County Extension Board. Trent has served on the Nebraska Dry Bean Growers Association.

The Benzel brothers strive to improve their farming operation by innovating and implementing ideas by collaborating with the University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension On-Farm Research program. 

โ€œI was looking for growers to do on-farm research, and I had met the Benzels, and they were quite interested in doing on-farm research,โ€ said John Thomas, Nebraska Extension Cropping Systems Extension Educator in Box Butte County. โ€œThey are progressive and want to learn and do new things.โ€ 

The Benzels have participated in more than 15 years of on-farm research with a heavy emphasis on dry beans. Where they have done variety trials, inoculant studies, and fertility in relationship to inoculants on dry beans. โ€œThey have just been great cooperators for many years with on-farm research,โ€ Thomas said. The research is published every year in the annual Nebraska On-Farm Research book, which is available for growers everywhere.

New dry edible bean varieties are always something the Benzel brothers are interested in participating with On-Farm Research. โ€œThey see the new varieties and test them right there on their farm to see how they do with their soils, farm equipment and climate,โ€ Thomas said. 

โ€œI’m always looking for a better way to grow crops,โ€ Steve Benzel said.