Land Legacy Intro

Text Transcript with Description of Visuals

AudioVideo
Washington's family farms are more than just fields and forests. They are heritage, a testament to hard work and dedication, and a source of crops and resources for future generations. Montage of video clips showing combines harvesting crops.

Wheat and canola fields.
The Land Legacy Program helps families steward their farms through gifts of land to Washington State University. A family walks through a field.

Timelapse footage showing a sign in a wheat field as the clouds pass by.

Text on the sign reads, Leave a land legacy.

Lorenz Bohrensen Farm

Gifted to W S U in 1990

Washington State University

legacy of land dot w s u dot e d u

Screenshot of the W S U land legacy website.

U R L reads, legacy of land dot w s u dot e d u
Land Legacy farms stay productive to support education and research.Two combines harvest wheat.

Three people closely examine a wheat stalk in a greenhouse.
More than 5,800 acres from family farms across the stateMap animation. Red pins fly in and land on a map of Washington State showing the locations of the current land legacy farms.
fund student scholarships and discovery in wheat breeding, precision and sustainable agriculture, conservation and much more.Students stand with a professor in a wheat plot.

A combine travels through a wheat plot as animated blue lines radiate out from the combine.

A red W S U flag waves in the wind in front of a wheat plot.

People join Land Legacy for many reasons, but all see the value of keeping their farms in production to benefit fellow farmers and the next generation.Experimental canola plots.

Golden wheat waves in the wind.

Combines harvest various crops.
Join us and imagine the impact your land can make. [MUSIC]Close-up of a yellow canola flower.

The sun sets behind golden wheat.

Lush green fields with mountains in the background.
[ Music ]W S U logo reads, College of Agricultural, Human, and Natural Resource Sciences.

Washington State University