2009 Precision Farmer Of The Year

Robert Blair is not your typical dryland Idaho farmer. While his passions rank family and farming first, he is also staunchly dedicated to promoting precision agriculture for the betterment of all farmers.

In addition to farming 1,500 acres of wheat, peas, lentils, garbanzos, alfalfa and cows, he taught the precision agriculture lab at the University of Idaho during the 2008 fall semester and has also started a precision agriculture business called PineCreek Precision. The company is centered on Unmanned Air Systems (UAS) — small, autopilot-controlled planes (less than 20 pounds) that can be used to gather imagery. Blair, the first farmer in the United States to own and fly a UAS on his own farmland, decided to make a prototype airframe in 2008. Today he is a national leader in the promotion of UAS for agriculture, and is the first person in the U.S. to file a petition to the FAA for commercial use. Not even Boeing, Lockheed, or other aircraft businesses or organizations had done that. He has traveled on his own dime to Washington, D.C. to try to make commercial UAS rules that are sensible for end users. He has spoken around the country at different venues on UAS use in ag.

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Robert is a board member of the Idaho Grain Producers Association, Lewiston Chamber Ag Committee, U of I/WSU Legume Virus Project, Idaho Farm Bureau LASR Committee, Nez Perce County Farm Bureau President, CEO Coalition on Transportation member, Governor Otter’s Kitchen Cabinet (Advisory Group), IGPA Alliance for Rail Competition National Representative, and taught the precision agriculture lab at the University of Idaho.

He is helping the University of Idaho to expand its precision agriculture program and is also promoting agriculture by doing TV interviews for a new farm program in our area. His leadership and ability to bring things together are excellent and promotion of ag and precision agriculture is at the front of everything he does.

MORE BY MATT HOPKINS

Robert hosts a precision agriculture field day each year and 2009 will be the third. His on-farm experiments with fertilizer, varieties, and different equipment has opened the eyes of many farmers in the area to the benefits of precision agriculture. Besides the economic benefits, he emphasizes the environmental stewardship aspects precision agriculture brings. He touts the benefits of precision agriculture records for proving environmentally safe tillage, application, and record keeping.

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Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Robert,
Congratulations on your award. Well deserved. How did this season go for you when it came to getting good Crop Cam photos? You could send me a couple of shots for my Aerial Image presentation. I am the guy that trys to use Kites to do the same thing with less technology.
Rich Douglass SCC Beatrice NE

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Robert,

Nice meeting you last week. Enjoyed our discussion of practical applications for the UAV. The vision is “right-on”. I am hopeful that you are successful getting through the red-tape.

Regards,

Bob Brady / Washington DC