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Heartland Finishes Second at State Land Judging

Last Wednesday, the HCS State Land Judging Team competed at Lake Wanahoo in Wahoo. Out of 148 contestants, Riley Quiring placed 12th, Lane Farrall placed 14th, Maddie Janzen placed 30th, and Faith Hiebner placed 83rd.

Together the team placed 2nd in the state and qualified for nationals.

Official Press Release: 

State Land Judging Competition Challenges Youth near Wahoo

LINCOLN, Nebraska – Students and instructors from 39 high schools met near Wahoo to compete in State Land Judging Oct. 22, 2025. The Lower Platte North Natural Resources District (NRD) hosted this year’s competition. 

With sunny skies and calm conditions, students judged at the Lake Wanahoo Recreation Area. The site provided a good variety of soil parent materials for the students to see including loess, glacial till, clay loam, and silty clay.

“It’s imperative we get more young people outdoors learning about Nebraska through hands-on activities,” said Sydney Abbott, Lower Platte North NRD education coordinator. “This contest is an amazing opportunity for students to learn about the land they call home and make real-world natural resources management decisions that prepare them for a future career. From everyone at the Lower Platte North NRD, we congratulate the students who participated in land judging and especially those who qualified for the state contest.”

Land Judging is a high school competition that challenges students to gain a better understanding of soil structure and land evaluation. Teams consist of four students from the same FFA chapter, and a few individuals who qualified separate from a team. Each participant learns how to recognize the physical features of the soil, determine land capability for crop production, and evaluate management practices needed for proper stewardship.

During the competition, students judge four soil pits using an evaluation card to make assessments on: soil depth, surface texture, permeability, slope, thickness of surface and erosion. The evaluation card is scored to determine overall placements for individuals and the team. To compete in the state contest, teams advance from one of the seven regional competitions hosted across the state in October.

2025 State Land Judging Individual Champions:

  1. Natalie Nutzman, Milford
  2. Ryan Rempel, Beatrice
  3. Ayzlee Haertel, Elmwood-Murdock
  4. Carson Towle, Elmwood-Murdock
  5. Preston Sjuts, Doniphan-Trumbull

2025 State Land Judging Team Champions:

  1. Elmwood-Murdock (Ayzlee Haertel, Carson Towle, Grayson Schroll, Cami Dieter)
  2. Heartland (Riley Quiring, Madalyn Janzen, Lane Farrall, Faith Hiebner)
  3. Beatrice (Ryan Rempel, Savannah Bolli, Zeb Edeal, Emily Doyza)
  4. Doniphan-Trumbull (Preston Sjuts, Jon Kovanda, Riley Bishop, Joe Schuler)
  5. Syracuse (Kaden Knake, Ryan Damme, Drew Paulson, Baylor Borer)

These top five Nebraska teams will advance to the national competition hosted in El Reno, Oklahoma, May 5-7, 2026. For more information on Nebraska Land Judging, visit https://www.nrdnet.org/nebraska-land-judging-soil-evaluation.

The Nebraska Association of Resources Districts (NARD), the trade association for Nebraska's 23 Natural Resources Districts (NRD), works with individual districts to protect lives, property and the future of Nebraska’s natural resources. NRDs are unique to Nebraska, and act as local government entities with broad responsibilities to protect Nebraska’s natural resources. Major Nebraska river basins form the boundaries of the 23 NRDs, enabling districts to respond to local conservation and resource management needs. Learn more about Nebraska’s NRDs at www.nrdnet.org.