Registration is open for the Generation Next: Our Turn to Ranch 12-week online course offered by the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service Jan. 26-April 19.

The cost is $300, and online registration is required at https://tx.ag/GenNextSpring26.

A man and young boy ride horses across a field accompanied by a dog.
Registration is open for the Generation Next: Our Turn to Ranch, a 12-week online course offered by the Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service on Jan. 26-April 19. The course provides instruction on starting a new agriculture business or enterprise as well as land management. (Hannah Harrison/Texas A&M AgriLife)

The course includes expert instruction on starting a new agriculture business or enterprise, tax implications and insurance needs, developing grazing or wildlife leases and more.

“Across Texas, we’re seeing individuals who may or may not have experience in agriculture or natural resource management inheriting or purchasing agricultural lands,” said Megan Clayton, Ph.D., AgriLife Extension range specialist and professor in the Texas A&M Department of Rangeland, Wildlife and Fisheries Management, Uvalde.

“The Generation Next curriculum is specifically designed to empower these landowners with the knowledge and resources needed to start a new agricultural operation, improve an existing one or manage the land to meet their specific stewardship goals.”

Getting started with a business plan

The online school enables participants to develop a business plan with support from professionals who specialize in each field and topic, Clayton said. Participants can expect to spend roughly two hours per week on lessons and activities, and can participate at their convenience.

Enrollees will learn about land management techniques and resources, alternative ranching operations, ecotourism opportunities, insurance and tax considerations, direct marketing and more. They will also learn how to set goals with measurable objectives.

While the course caters to new or inexperienced landowners, individuals with established operations also benefit from the curriculum.  

Course provides financial and ecological foundation

Since its inception in 2019, the online program has reached close to 1,000 landowners, and improved knowledge is not the only benefit participants can expect.

“On average, participants anticipate the course has an annual economic benefit of about $11,000,” Clayton said.

In addition to business and production-related topics, the course also provides a critical foundation in ecologically and environmentally sound land management.

For more information, contact Clayton at 830-988-6123 or [email protected].

Share or print this post: