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Drought doesn’t begin when the grass turns brown.
It begins much earlier—when producers continue operating as though rain is guaranteed.
In this short-form episode, three experienced South Dakota Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) representatives—Tanse Herrmann, Marcia Deneke, and Emily Rohrer—share practical strategies for navigating dry conditions before they become a crisis.
This conversation is focused on one central idea:
Hope is not a drought plan.
The discussion moves beyond panic and reaction into practical decision-making for both livestock and crop producers. From delaying pasture turnout and adjusting stocking rates to rethinking fertility timing, yield goals, crop plans, and forage options, this episode is about staying flexible while protecting both the resource and the bottom line.
The speakers also explore how drought can create opportunities for collaboration between crop and livestock systems—including grazing standing crops, alternative forage options, and tools like the South Dakota Grazing Exchange.
Throughout the episode, one message remains consistent:
Act early. Stay flexible. Protect the resource.
What You’ll Learn
Key Insight
Drought doesn’t just test a season.
It tests the system.
The operations most likely to weather difficult years are often the ones that planned early, stayed flexible, and protected their soil and forage base before conditions worsened.
Go Deeper
This conversation also inspired an article. To read, go here:
👉 “When the Rain Doesn’t Come: A Practical Drought Playbook for Farmers and Ranchers”
https://www.growingresiliencesd.com/post/when-the-rain-doesn-t-come-a-practical-drought-playbook-for-farmers-and-ranchers
Additional Resources Mentioned
👉 South Dakota Grazing Exchange: https://sdgrazingexchange.com
👉 SD Grassland Coalition Drought Planning Tools: https://droughtplansdgrass.org
About the Speakers
Tanse Herrmann is the South Dakota NRCS State Grazing Lands Soil Health Specialist, focused on grazing management, drought resilience, and long-term grassland function.
Marcia Deneke serves as South Dakota NRCS State Agronomist, helping producers navigate agronomic decisions related to soil health, crop management, and risk reduction.
Emily Rohrer is the South Dakota NRCS State Rangeland Management Specialist, working directly with producers on grazing systems, forage planning, and rangeland resilience.
Together, they bring decades of practical, field-based experience helping producers adapt to changing conditions while protecting the long-term health of their operations.
By Soil Health Labs4.8
1010 ratings
Drought doesn’t begin when the grass turns brown.
It begins much earlier—when producers continue operating as though rain is guaranteed.
In this short-form episode, three experienced South Dakota Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS) representatives—Tanse Herrmann, Marcia Deneke, and Emily Rohrer—share practical strategies for navigating dry conditions before they become a crisis.
This conversation is focused on one central idea:
Hope is not a drought plan.
The discussion moves beyond panic and reaction into practical decision-making for both livestock and crop producers. From delaying pasture turnout and adjusting stocking rates to rethinking fertility timing, yield goals, crop plans, and forage options, this episode is about staying flexible while protecting both the resource and the bottom line.
The speakers also explore how drought can create opportunities for collaboration between crop and livestock systems—including grazing standing crops, alternative forage options, and tools like the South Dakota Grazing Exchange.
Throughout the episode, one message remains consistent:
Act early. Stay flexible. Protect the resource.
What You’ll Learn
Key Insight
Drought doesn’t just test a season.
It tests the system.
The operations most likely to weather difficult years are often the ones that planned early, stayed flexible, and protected their soil and forage base before conditions worsened.
Go Deeper
This conversation also inspired an article. To read, go here:
👉 “When the Rain Doesn’t Come: A Practical Drought Playbook for Farmers and Ranchers”
https://www.growingresiliencesd.com/post/when-the-rain-doesn-t-come-a-practical-drought-playbook-for-farmers-and-ranchers
Additional Resources Mentioned
👉 South Dakota Grazing Exchange: https://sdgrazingexchange.com
👉 SD Grassland Coalition Drought Planning Tools: https://droughtplansdgrass.org
About the Speakers
Tanse Herrmann is the South Dakota NRCS State Grazing Lands Soil Health Specialist, focused on grazing management, drought resilience, and long-term grassland function.
Marcia Deneke serves as South Dakota NRCS State Agronomist, helping producers navigate agronomic decisions related to soil health, crop management, and risk reduction.
Emily Rohrer is the South Dakota NRCS State Rangeland Management Specialist, working directly with producers on grazing systems, forage planning, and rangeland resilience.
Together, they bring decades of practical, field-based experience helping producers adapt to changing conditions while protecting the long-term health of their operations.

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