Alabama 2007 Nominee for Lloyd Wright Small Farmer Award
Moses
Jones – Taking Care of People and the Land
By Fay Garner, Public Affairs Assistant, NRCS, Auburn, Alabama
Amazing! That is the word that many people use to describe Mr. Moses Jones, a
small scale beef producer in the Black Belt area of Alabama. At 90 years of age,
Mr. Jones is successful managing cattle and hay operations on three separate
farms while serving as pastor of two churches. When most people his age prefer a
sedentary lifestyle, Mr. Jones is up at dawn getting ready for a hard day’s
work.
In 2007, Mr. Jones was the Alabama nominee for the annual Lloyd Wright Small
Farmer award presented by the National Organization of Professional Black
Natural Resources Conservation Service Employees (NOPBNRCSE). During that same
year, Mr. Jones received the Outstanding Conservation Work in Grazing award
given by the Marengo County, Alabama, Soil and Water Conservation District for
his commitment to conservation and community. He is highly respected in his
community as a cattle producer, a conservationist, and a spiritual leader.
Mr. Jones has prospered in the Black Belt, partly because of his respect for
people and the land, and the good work ethic that his father and grandfather
instilled in him. The Jones’ obviously encouraged these traits in their only
child, Moses, Jr., because he continues to help out on the farms, when he is not
performing neurosurgery in Jackson, Mississippi.
Mr. Jones was raised on a farm in Marengo County, Alabama, on property that
has been in his family for almost 100 years. After completing a stint in the
Army during World War II, he returned home to Uniontown and started cattle
farming with his father while attending the seminary at Selma University,
Alabama.
Mr. Jones has been in the cattle business for over 70 years. He taught Social
Studies and Math during 30 of those years. His commitment did not stop there.
While he was farming and teaching, he also pastored a church for 53 years, and
for three years, he pastored two churches at a time.
Beginning in the late 1940’s, Moses Jones traveled every other Sunday to lead
the Macedonia Baptist Church in Talladega, Alabama. When he started, he had to
stay overnight and would travel to Talladega by bus on Saturday and ride back
home to Union Town on Sunday evening. (Today it is a 2.5 hour drive one way.)
During his last years at Macedonia, he became the leader of Gillfield Baptist
Church in Marengo County and sometimes filled in for another church in the area.
He retired from the Talladega ministry about three years ago, but he continues
to lead the other two churches. When asked why he quit pastoring in Talladega,
Mr. Jones said, "Fifty-three years is a long time. I quit because it was getting
too much for me to continue traveling each week and also take care of my
obligations at home." "I took care of churches," he continued, "and when I was
gone; my wife took care of things at home. She is a good helper."
Mr. and Mrs. Jones own 275 acres in Marengo and Hale Counties. He and his
wife have 185 acres in hay and pasture on their homestead where they raise
mostly mixed breed cattle and grow some hay; they have 30 acres in hay in
Marengo County, and transfer young heifers and new mothers to 60 acres that Mrs.
Jones inherited in Hale County. Mr. Jones also raises cattle and hay on 200
acres his son owns in Hale County.
Mr. Jones has a simple philosophy on raising cows. He believes that if you
give cattle a little quality food and provide them lots of water, they will grow
out pretty good. This requires some planning ahead for problems like this year’s
drought. He said, "If you prepare for the bad times, you will make it through."
Mr. Jones works tirelessly to keep his pastures in good condition, and they are
weathering the drought well. You can see some cracked earth at times, but his
grass is still living and growing.
When asked how the drought affected his cattle operation, Mr. Jones said that
this year’s drought did not affect him as severely as it did others. He has deep
wells on each of his farms. He said, "On each farm, I drilled a well. Wells are
a little more expensive than ponds, but they are better for a cattle operation.
Ponds dry up, the cows get stuck in the muck, and it takes a lot of work to get
them out. I do not have streams, creeks, or ponds on my farms, we only use our
wells."
Mr. Jones helped feed his cattle during the drought by using hay that he kept
stored for just such an occasion. He said, "If you see to things properly ahead
of time, unseen things will not hurt you so bad." Unlike many of his fellow
producers, he did not have to sell off any cattle because of this summer’s
drought.
Duane Andrews, Marengo County NRCS Soil Conservationist, said, "Mr. Jones is
a good steward to the land, he’s a conservationist. People across the county
grazing the same acreage as Mr. Jones, try to produce as many cows as they can,
and they usually overgraze. Mr. Jones keeps his stocking rate lower so when
there is a lack of rain; he is not under as much pressure for feed and water."
Mr. Jones does not have hired hands on his farms. He depends on the
four-legged kind. He has four dogs which are instrumental in helping him manage
the cattle. The cows are trained to come when he calls them, but he could not
herd them alone without the dogs.
Duane Andrews said, "You will not find many weeds or out of control erosion
on Mr. Jones’s property. He works quickly to stop soil erosion and believes in
using what he has available to create good erosion control measures. He does not
like to burn brush, limbs, or old hay. He uses the natural materials to help
hold the topsoil on his property."
Mr. Jones advises, "You do not want the water rushing across your property to
deposit your good topsoil in your neighbor’s yard. When I bought this place, it
had a gully almost big enough to swallow a house. Over the years, I took some
old hay and tree limbs that most people burn up and put it in the washed-out
area. Pretty soon bushes and grass started to grow up through the materials, and
after a big rain, instead of washing larger, the dirt was held by the debris and
it built up the land fairly level, without using a bulldozer." Today there is no
sign of a gully on his property, just gentle, grass covered slopes.
In talking with Mr. Jones, you realize he is also a philosopher. He uses his
wisdom to guide people to consider life’s lessons. He said, "You should be as
close to the best as you can be. My aim is to do the best job I can. That is
want I want to do."
As you look across his aesthetically pleasing and environmentally sound
cattle farm, you can see that that is exactly what he has done over the years.
Mr. Jones has taken his life-lessons and used them to help his family, his
community, and his ministry.
The Jones’ cow-calf operation is a shining example of what a small farmer can
do with limited resources. The Jones’ are doing what is important -- taking care
of people and the land.
The Alabama National Organization of Professional Black NRCS Employees is
proud to nominate Moses Jones for the Lloyd Wright Small Farmer Award for 2007.
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