Horticulture

Respected researcher, teacher Savin named horticulture department head

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. —  A research-for-undergraduates experience “in the middle of nowhere” helped set Mary Savin on a path to becoming the next head of the horticulture department at the University of Arkansas.

Mary Savin will take the reins of the horticulture department on April 1, 2024. (U of A System Divison of Agriculture photo)

Savin, a Massachusetts native, starts her new job April 1. She earned her bachelor’s degree in biology/biological sciences from the University of Notre Dame, followed by a master’s in biodegradation and doctorate in soil ecology, both from the University of Rhode Island.

“I was a biology undergraduate trying to figure out what to do with my life,” she said. With 10 weeks of research and outdoor classes in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin border, “I found my calling.”

She went into the private sector in environmental analysis with a consulting firm, which she loved, but “I felt like I needed more. More knowledge. More experience in the applied sciences.”

Savin applied for graduate school, eventually earning her Ph.D. “Once I was introduced to research, I decided that was really fun.”

An opportunity at the University of Arkansas opened and she took it. Over the years, “I've evolved and become involved in different aspects of teaching, research and administration that have just led me to this path,” she said.

Savin takes over from Wayne Mackay, who retires at the end of March after 10 years at the helm.

“Horticulture is just a strong department with some excellent faculty and staff, and I think Wayne's done a fabulous job leading the department, and so I’m very excited to be here,” she said.

To prepare for her new role, Savin is set to take part in major horticulture conferences and will be involved in a departmental retreat with horticulture faculty to ensure an effective transition.

Mackay said “I’m really excited to have Mary as my successor. She’s an excellent teacher, an excellent researcher and has excellent international experience, which is important for our students. I think her experience on campus as a researcher, and most recently, with her administrative experience has given her a broader scope of experience.”

In 2022, Savin was appointed an assistant director of the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station — the research arm of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture — and has been teaching microbial ecology and courses in crop, soil, and environmental sciences through the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences since 2002.

As department head, Savin will oversee horticulture teaching through Bumpers College, and research and extension activities through the Division of Agriculture.

“I’m confident she’s going to lead the department to even better things,” Mackay said.

Savin was awarded the 2022 Spitze Award Spitze Land Grant University Faculty Award for Excellence. She was also bestowed with the Jack G. Justus Award for Teaching Excellence in 2016 from Bumpers College.

She also has a stellar record of professional service, including serving as faculty senate chair, campus faculty chair, co-director of the Teaching Faculty Support Center, and faculty editor of “Discovery — The Student Journal of the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultural, Food and Life Sciences.” Savin has also landed more than $4.5 million in grants and had more than 80 peer-reviewed publications.

Jean-François Meullenet, head of the experiment station, said “I am thankful to Dr. Savin for accepting this new leadership role in horticulture. I have had the chance to work with Mary closely over the past year and I am extremely impressed with her skills. I know she will be an outstanding department head and I look forward to working with her in that capacity.”

“Mary has been an active part of campus leadership and it is exciting to see her step into this new role,” said Jeff Edwards, dean of Bumpers College. “Mary’s strong connections with colleagues across campus and throughout the Division of Agriculture are going to be very beneficial in furthering our goal of harmonization and alignment of the three land-grant mission areas.

“She genuinely cares about the success of our faculty, staff and students,” Edwards added. “Horticulture is already a strong department. Wayne did a great job, and we appreciate his service and leadership. It will be exciting to see how Mary’s leadership builds off of that and makes a strong department even stronger.”

John Anderson, director of the Cooperative Extension Service said he was “excited to have Dr. Savin joining our administrative team as the head of the Horticulture department.  She has obviously had a distinguished career to this point as a faculty member at the University of Arkansas. 

“She understands the state and the needs of our stakeholders well.  I look forward to working with Dr. Savin to carry on, and add to, the horticulture department’s outstanding contributions to our extension programming effort,” he said.

Making the change

“I want to thank Wayne for his leadership and for being willing to spend time to help me in this transition,” Savin said. And while leaving the department of crop, soils and environmental science, is bittersweet, “I’m really looking forward to getting started. It’s going to be an amazing experience.”

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on X and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow on X at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on X at @AgInArk.

Longtime extension agent appointed consumer horticulture educator, Arkansas Master Gardener coordinator

By Tracy Courage
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LITTLE ROCK — The Cooperative Extension Service has a new consumer horticulture educator who will lead statewide outreach and coordinate Master Gardener programs.

NEW TO THE BEAT — Randy Forst, who has served as a county extension agent for 13 years, has been hired as the consumer horticulture educator for extension, part of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. In his new role, Forst will provide leadership for statewide horticulture programs and coordinate the Arkansas Master Gardeners program, the state’s largest horticulture volunteer and education organization. Forst began the new position Oct. 3. (Division of Agriculture photo.)

Randy Forst, who has served as a county extension agent for 13 years, has been hired as the consumer horticulture educator for extension, part of the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture. In his new role, Forst will provide leadership for statewide horticulture programs and coordinate the Arkansas Master Gardeners program, the state’s largest horticulture volunteer and education organization. Forst began the new position Oct. 3.

“Randy is the perfect person to lead our consumer horticulture program and Master Gardener program,” Dr. Bob Scott, director of the Cooperative Extension Service, said. “He has worked in the Delta, Ouachita and Ozark districts and is an expert when it comes to Arkansas horticulture. He will be an asset to our agents as well as to the hundreds of Master Gardeners we have volunteering across the state.”

Started in 1988 in four counties (Garland, Jefferson, Pulaski, and Saline) and with 40 members, the Arkansas Master Gardeners program now has more than 3,400 volunteers working in 67 of the state’s counties. Volunteers maintain hundreds of gardens and landscaping projects across Arkansas. Last year, they donated 128,994 service hours and provided 73,555 education hours.

Forst will support county extension agents across then state in managing all aspects of the Master Gardeners volunteer program, including policies and procedures, recruitment, training and management.

Forst has previous served as an agent and horticulture expert in St. Francis, Carroll and Pulaski counties. He most recently served as the staff chair for the Pulaski County extension office, where he worked with 560 Master Gardener volunteers.

“I just love it. The Master Gardener program is a great resource for Arkansas, and our volunteers do an exceptional job of educating others in their counties about horticulture,” Forst said. “It’s amazing the different projects we have across the state.”

Forst has a Bachelor of Science in Landscape Design and Urban Horticulture and a Master of Science in General Agriculture, both from the University of Arkansas. Before joining extension, he was a landscape architect in Tennessee.

 

For more information about the Master Gardener program in Arkansas, visit www.uaex.uada.edu/master-gardeners. To learn more about horticulture and other extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on Twitter at @AR_Extension.

Cooperative Extension Service welcomes new weed specialist to horticulture faculty

By Rebekah Hall
U of A System Division of Agriculture

LITTLE ROCK — Hannah Wright-Smith, new extension weed specialist for the University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture, is looking forward to helping county extension agents make a difference in the lives of their constituents.

NEW TO EXTENSION — Hannah Wright-Smith has joined the Cooperative Extension Service's horticulture faculty as a weed specialist, where she will help county agents with issues related to brush control, forests, forages, turf, horticulture crops, industrial sites and right-of-way. (Division of Agriculture photo.)

“I am most excited to be a resource for county agents so they can assist people in their communities,” she said.

Wright-Smith began her new extension role on Oct. 3. Vic Ford, extension associate vice president of agriculture and natural resources, said Wright-Smith’s primary responsibilities will be handling weed science problems and education for several subject areas.

“This includes brush control, forests, forages, turf, horticulture crops, industrial sites and right-of-way,” Ford said.

As part of her duties, Wright-Smith will also conduct research for the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station, the research arm of the Division of Agriculture.

In 2016, Wright-Smith received her Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Economics with an emphasis in Agribusiness from Mississippi State University. She received her Master of Science in Crop, Soil and Environmental Sciences, with an emphasis in Weed Science, from the University of Arkansas in 2020. She will receive her Ph.D. in Crop and Soil Sciences, with an emphasis in Weed Science, from the University of Georgia in December. Her dissertation focuses on “investigating novel herbicide uses in specialty crops, detecting pesticide residues in cotton and evaluating the benefits of a new herbicide for wheat producers.”

Wright-Smith said she is excited to join the extension horticulture faculty and get started with her programming.

“I am glad to be in the horticulture department,” she said. “The people are great, and I have really enjoyed the diversity of crops covered by the department and this weed specialist position. I am really looking forward to getting my program going.”

Ford said Wright-Smith and her expertise are a welcome addition to the agriculture and natural resources section.

“Dr. Wright-Smith is a product of the University of Arkansas, and we are proud to have her on the agriculture and natural resources team,” Ford said. “She has the skills and desire to assist and train agents and clients in her field. She has already started making impacts and working with agents. She has that drive to help people, which differentiates good extension employees. I look forward to seeing her career develop.”

Wright-Smith can be reached at hewright@uada.edu. For more information about extension crops and commercial horticulture resources, visit the Commercial Horticulture in Arkansas website.

To learn about extension programs in Arkansas, contact your local Cooperative Extension Service agent or visit www.uaex.uada.edu. Follow us on Twitter and Instagram at @AR_Extension. To learn more about Division of Agriculture research, visit the Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uada.edu. Follow on Twitter at @ArkAgResearch. To learn more about the Division of Agriculture, visit https://uada.edu/. Follow us on Twitter at @AgInArk.