WV Farm Bureau Magazine April 2016 | Page 16

No Life Without Water Tabby Bennett “You have to have water - especially in drought years. Seasons with little rain are tough.” These are the words of an experienced farmer who raises beef cattle and hay, and knows a thing or two about how to improve and make the most of his water supply. Dick Barnes of Flat Top, West Virginia has been farming since the late 1960s. He and his dad bought their first farm around 1968, then purchased another around 1971. Barnes was a salesman for most of his life, but now farms full time and manages a beautiful 300-acre piece 16 West Virginia Farm Bureau News of land full of hay, lots of fence, breathtaking mountain views and seven ponds. Two of Barnes’ ponds were created through the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP) with the technical and engineering assistance of Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). For one pond in particular, Barnes had a difficult time figuring out how he could create a large enough dam to hold water. One day he had the idea of removing top soil from one of his fields, then later replacing it so he could get the results he needed to create the pond.