Johnston Soil and Water Conservation District

Johnston Soil and Water Conservation District Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Johnston Soil and Water Conservation District, Environmental conservation organisation, Smithfield, NC.

The Mission of the Johnston Soil and Water Conservation District is to provide technical, educational and financial resources to Johnston County citizens for the protection and conservation of our natural resources.

06/09/2026

The Johnston Soil and Water Conservation District Board of Supervisor will hold it's Regular Meeting on Tuesday, June 23, 2026 at 8:00am This will be available in person or virtually. In person at Johnston County Ag Center boardroom #313 (enter door on the west side of the ag center at the large event parking lot or virtually by phone 1-406-948-2151 pin 365 722 775 # or on GoogleMeets meet.google.com/tvz-jyub-xxu

05/08/2026
Do you care about preserving family farms and helping farming families? Help make the case for increased funding for the...
05/04/2026

Do you care about preserving family farms and helping farming families? Help make the case for increased funding for the ADFP Trust Fund by making your voice heard on May 13 in Raleigh.

Thankful for the rain we have received...Now are you ready to rent one of our No-Till Drills? Contact our office today t...
04/30/2026

Thankful for the rain we have received...Now are you ready to rent one of our No-Till Drills? Contact our office today to reserve our No-Till Drill for your Johnston County farms.
Call 919-934-7156 ext. 3
The NO-TILL Benefits:
No-till dramatically reduces soil erosion.
Virtually all crop residue remains on the soil surface and thus protects the soil from most of the damages caused by wind and rain.
Crop residue on the soil surface reduces runoff and retains moisture.
Expenses for equipment decrease because the farmer doesn't need a plow, disk, or field cultivator.
The farmer saves time and fuel because of fewer trips across the field with heavy equipment. In addition, fewer trips reduce compaction.
No-till helps build organic matter.
Residue from the previous crop remains standing throughout the winter. The residue reduces soil erosion, provides shelter for wildlife, reduces evaporation, and traps snow which increases moisture.
Using existing row patterns for controlled traffic helps eliminate compaction.
Considerations:
No-till requires skillful management.
No-till restricts the farmer to surface-applied herbicides.
For best results, fertilizers should be injected or banded. This is particularly true for nitrogen, especially for those forms that are volatile.
W**d control is primarily dependent upon herbicides.
Johnston Soil and Water No-Till Drill Specifications:
2017 Great Plains 706NT-1075 is a 7 FT END WHEEL NO TILL COMPACT DRILL
10 OPENERS 7.5 ROW SPACINGS
9.00 X 24 8 PLY TIRES
7FT WORKING WIDTH
9FT 10 INCH TRANSPORT WIDTH
5/8 TURBO COULTERS
17.5 BU MAIN SEED BOX CAPACITY
1.68 BU SMALL SEED BOX

04/05/2026

With the County’s support, another 78 acres in Johnston will remain in farming forever.

The Johnston Soil and Water Conservation District, on Wednesday, purchased two conservation easements — one for 52.66 acres and another for 25.31 acres, both along Johnsons Chapel Road north of Benson.

Dewitt Hardee and his wife, Lynn, own the land, which has been in the Hardee family since before the Civil War. “I began farming this land myself after my father became disabled following an automobile wreck in 1974,” Dewitt Hardee said. “I was 14 and a freshman at South Johnston High School.”

The family raised hogs and grew to***co, sweet potatoes, corn, soybeans, wheat, rye and vegetables. Today, they lease the land to another farming operation while using some of the acreage for timber management and nursery crops. “It is important to me and the family to keep the land in farming and forestry so future generations will have the ability to produce food and fiber,” Hardee said.

Like many Johnston farm families, the Hardees have received calls from developers asking them to sell their land. “We tell them it is family inheritance and we like the land better than money,” Hardee said. “It is not for sale. It is for future generations to enjoy.”

The Hardees have two adult children, Melanie, a doctor, and Jonathan, a conservationist with the Natural Resources Conservation Service, part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. “Both have plans to come back to the farm and live,” Hardee said, noting that Jonathan and his fiancée are already developing a site for a house.

Under a conservation easement, a landowner essentially sells his development rights, keeping the land in farming in perpetuity. The amount paid is the difference between the land’s value as a farm and its value if sold for development.

Greg Walker, head of the Johnston Soil and Water Conservation District, welcomed the opportunity to preserve more farmland in the County. “We are most happy to close these two easements for the Hardee family,” he said. “These are some of the first ones to come in our door.”

More easements are on the way, Walker said, noting strong interest among Johnston farm owners. “We have four more parcels fully funded and are making plans to finalize them over the next three to five months. After those four parcels, we have four more with partial funding.”

Soil and Water relies on federal, state and, often, local dollars to purchase conservation easements, which are a one-time payment to the landowner. The Hardees received a total of $813,000 — $552,000 for the larger tract and $261,000 for the smaller one. In this case, the funding came from the state’s Agricultural Development Farmland Preservation Trust Fund and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Agricultural Land Easement Program. Walker’s office helped prepare the grant applications and due-diligence documents, and it secured funding for the survey, title search and closing costs.

For more information about conservation easements, call 919-934-7156, Ext. 3, or email [email protected].

Need a No-Till Drill to rent this Spring? Contact our office today to reserve our No-Till Drill for your Johnston County...
03/03/2026

Need a No-Till Drill to rent this Spring? Contact our office today to reserve our No-Till Drill for your Johnston County farms.
Call 919-934-7156 ext. 3
The NO-TILL Benefits:
No-till dramatically reduces soil erosion.
Virtually all crop residue remains on the soil surface and thus protects the soil from most of the damages caused by wind and rain.
Crop residue on the soil surface reduces runoff and retains moisture.
Expenses for equipment decrease because the farmer doesn't need a plow, disk, or field cultivator.
The farmer saves time and fuel because of fewer trips across the field with heavy equipment. In addition, fewer trips reduce compaction.
No-till helps build organic matter.
Residue from the previous crop remains standing throughout the winter. The residue reduces soil erosion, provides shelter for wildlife, reduces evaporation, and traps snow which increases moisture.
Using existing row patterns for controlled traffic helps eliminate compaction.
Considerations:
No-till requires skillful management.
No-till restricts the farmer to surface-applied herbicides.
For best results, fertilizers should be injected or banded. This is particularly true for nitrogen, especially for those forms that are volatile.
W**d control is primarily dependent upon herbicides.
Johnston Soil and Water No-Till Drill Specifications:
2017 Great Plains 706NT-1075 is a 7 FT END WHEEL NO TILL COMPACT DRILL
10 OPENERS 7.5 ROW SPACINGS
9.00 X 24 8 PLY TIRES
7FT WORKING WIDTH
9FT 10 INCH TRANSPORT WIDTH
5/8 TURBO COULTERS
17.5 BU MAIN SEED BOX CAPACITY
1.68 BU SMALL SEED BOX

02/26/2026

The Johnston County Board of Commissioners will hold a Town Hall meeting on the draft Unified Development Ordinance. The meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. Monday, March 23, at the Johnston County Agricultural Center, 2736 N.C. 210, Smithfield.
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The meeting will start with a presentation on the UDO from County planning staff and the consulting firm that helped draft the ordinance. Afterward, planning and consulting staff will be at various stations with detailed information about the UDO, and they’ll be available to answer questions and receive feedback.
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A recent public hearing during a Board of Commissioners meeting drew a host of speakers concerned about how the proposed rules would affect them. In response, Commissioners pledged to get the UDO right, and since then, planning staff and the consulting firm have been at work on revising the ordinance.
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The latest draft and a summary of the latest revisions will be available Friday, Feb. 27, on the Planning Department’s website at johnstonnc.gov/planning/. Commissioners note that more revisions are likely as they continue to receive feedback from the public.

02/24/2026
Date change due to the weather! Please join NC Cooperative Extension on the new date for Fruit & Nut Pruning Workshop: S...
01/22/2026

Date change due to the weather! Please join NC Cooperative Extension on the new date for Fruit & Nut Pruning Workshop: Saturday, February 7th, 2026.

Date change due to the weather! Please join us on February 7th, 2026.

Address

Smithfield, NC
27577

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 7:30am - 4:30pm

Telephone

+19199347156

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