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Agricultural News


OSU names new research station facility in honor of Raymond Sidwell

Mon, 11 May 2015 07:12:37 CDT

OSU names new research station facility in honor of Raymond Sidwell The life's work of the late Raymond Sidwell of Goltry will continue to provide benefits to agricultural producers across the region, thanks to the new facility that will bear his name at the Oklahoma State University Division of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources' North Central Research Station.



Sidwell served as senior station manager for the 143-acre experiment station, located in the heart of wheat production country just west of Lahoma, from June of 1980 until his passing in December of 2013.



The naming of the new Dr. Raymond Sidwell Research Facility at the station was announced during the May 8 Wheat Field Day. The facility will have a conference room, offices and restrooms compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act, and will feature a large open bay design that will facilitate equipment and make possible field day events unimpeded by weather. Awt the Field Day, Radio Oklahoma Ag Network Farm Director Ron Hays talked with OSU Dean and Vice President of DASNR at Oklahoma State University, Dr. Tom Coon about this new facility and what it will mean for research efforts for wheat producers across the southern great plains. You can hear their conversation by clicking on the LISTEN BAR at the bottom of the story.


"Dr. Sidwell was an important part of our Wheat Improvement Team, working tirelessly to ensure wheat growers were able to take advantage of improved crop varieties and research-based best management practices," said Thomas Coon, DASNR vice president, dean and director. "He really was one of the great ambassadors of the land-grant mission, helping Oklahomans improve the quality of life for them, their families and their communities."



"There will be a lot of orange integrated into the building, signifying it is an OSU facility, which would be important to Raymond," said Randy Raper, interim assistant director of DASNR's statewide Oklahoma Agricultural Experiment Station system. "Those who knew Raymond are aware he was fond of porches, so we're incorporating one into the front of the facility for all who visit to enjoy and hopefully remember Raymond and what he meant to Oklahoma agricultural producers."



More than three decades of Sidwell's meticulous management of the station allowed for major research efforts in wheat breeding and variety development, soil fertility, weed science, soybean varieties and cropping systems, grain sorghum variety trials, plant pathology and entomology.



Through station educational activities such as the annual Lahoma Wheat Tour, Sidwell hosted literally thousands of guests over the years, including agricultural producers, commodity groups, foreign dignitaries, national and state legislators and numerous other officials, representatives and individuals from the public and private sectors.




The Sidwells Raymond, his wife Brenda and their children Bambi and Brady have long been highly regarded members of Oklahoma's agricultural and agribusiness communities, and are recognized by their farmer peers as very progressive and proactive production agriculturalists.



Brady Sidwell, an OSU agricultural economics alumnus and president of the Sidwell Family Farm, said his father implemented many science-proven practices into the family operation that were backed by cutting-edge research done at the North Central Research Station under his guidance.



"Our family is both extremely proud as well as humbled to have this opportunity to honor our father in such a way," he said. "Research and Extension programs at land-grant institutions play such a critical role in Oklahoma and American agriculture."



Sidwell added the family is grateful to be able to do their part in further promoting the work being done by the OSU Wheat Improvement Team.



"As a longstanding certified seed wheat producer, we will continue to utilize the best-in-class seed genetics being released by OSU every year and know that the new Dr. Raymond Sidwell Research Facility will only help this already well-respected program reach new heights," he said.



For Bambi Sidwell, she always knew how passionate her father was about agriculture, in general, and wheat improvement, in particular.



"Growing up on our family farm near Goltry, our dad had an excitement about continuously improving wheat production," she said. "He enjoyed sharing ideas with other producers that would have a significant and positive impact on people's lives and their farming operations. Our dad was keen on maintaining a meticulously clean operation, something we strive to continue today."



An OSU agribusiness alumna, Bambi said the family is proud to be able to take part in honoring her father in a way that continues his legacy.



Funding for the new facility was made through the Sidwell family, the Sitlington Trust and OAES, a state agency that is the official research arm of DASNR.



"The future of Oklahoma's wheat industry is looking brighter every day with two significant projects: The Dr. Raymond Sidwell Research Facility at our Lahoma station and our new Foundation Seed facility in Stillwater, with construction beginning later this year," Coon said.


In the picture above- The naming of the Dr. Raymond Sidwell Research Facility was announced officially at the May 8 Lahoma Wheat Field Day. Pictured from left: Thomas Coon, vice president, dean and director of OSU's Division of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources; Brady, Brenda and Bambi Sidwell; and Jim Reese, secretary and commissioner of agriculture for the state of Oklahoma. (Photo by Todd Johnson)


   


   


Ron Hays talks with Dr. Tom Coon about the new research facility planned for Lahoma
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