Auburn Students Get Global View of Agriculture in Australia

The trip is giving them a firsthand look at farming beyond the U.S.

QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA (RFD News)Auburn University graduate students are getting a firsthand look at agriculture on a global scale during a recent trip to Australia.

Traveling with the Alabama Extension Agronomic Crops Team, the group is seeing how farming works in a different part of the world while also recognizing some of the same practices they see back home.

Alabama Extension Entomologist Scott Graham says the experience has helped broaden their perspective: “I think this really just opened their eyes. Like, I say, just to see what’s outside of Alabama and outside of the US and just how big this system is.”

Students say farmers in both places face many of the same challenges, including crop decisions, pest management, and profitability.

The trip is also helping them understand how connected agriculture is, even across different countries.

The Auburn College of Agriculture also offers similar trips to Mexico, Brazil, and Italy.

Related Stories
China is making strategic moves by purchasing more soybeans from Argentina and may soon follow the EU and reopen its market to Brazilian chicken exports.
Farmers should watch for soybean export rebounds with harvest, while corn and wheat shipments remain strong and sorghum demand struggles.
Rollins says the new trade relationship with Taiwan, which is committed to buying a significant amount of U.S. soy, could not come at a better time for farmers facing financial strain.
Higher tariffs may shield some U.S. crops but risk retaliation, lost markets, and higher costs for growers. The WTO disputes highlight the fragile balance between trade policy, farm exports, and input supply chains.
USMEF CEO Dan Halstrom joined us on Monday’s Market Day Report for his analysis on the U.S.-Taiwan trade agreement, which includes big bucks for U.S. Beef.
Record U.S. sorghum crop faces weak demand as China slashes imports, while corn farmers warn of rising costs, shrinking margins, and global market pressures.

Knoxville native Neal Burnette-Irwin is a graduate from MTSU where he majored in Journalism and Entertainment Studies. He works as a digital content producer with RFD News and is represented by multiple talent agencies in Nashville and Chicago.


LATEST STORIES BY THIS AUTHOR:

The country artist’s “Stand By Your Pan” blends vintage-inspired recipes with stories, humor, and Southern hospitality.
New data from the Illinois Farm Bureau show that farm financial conditions are stabilizing, even as debt per acre and borrowing costs continue to climb.
New trade access, tariff concerns and international negotiations are reshaping the global beef market.
Waylon NeSmith says continuing the operation is a way to carry on the lessons and legacy his father left behind.
Officials say no additional spread has been detected as containment and monitoring efforts move forward.
Turner built one of the nation’s largest private land holdings while becoming a major force in bison ranching and conservation.