Agriculture and Natural Resources Educator Julian Joins Lincoln County Extension Team

The University of Wyoming Extension team in Lincoln County welcomes agriculture and natural resources (ANR) educator McKenna Julian, who transferred from Uinta County Extension last month. She is now based in UW Extension’s Kemmerer office.

A white woman with long straight brown hair leans against a tree.
McKenna Julian.

Julian grew up in western Wyoming and currently lives in Kemmerer on her family’s sheep operation.

Julian began working for UW Extension in 2019 as the Uinta County 4-H youth development educator. In 2023, she became the ANR educator for Uinta County, giving her an opportunity to focus on livestock production.

Julian transferred to Lincoln County in August 2024, where she will continue to serve as an ANR educator. This transition will allow her to serve the community in which she lives and work closer to home.

“Lincoln County is an ag rich community,” says Julian. “My background in livestock production and western Wyoming communities should be helpful when meeting the needs of my clientele.”

Since 2023, Julian has acted as a program facilitator and teacher in Wyoming Ranch Camp, a week-long program which provides adult applicants with the tools and knowledge to manage a ranch.

Julian is also a leader within the Sheep Task Force, an initiative that aims to provide the Wyoming sheep industry with more access to sheep production information. She has been involved with the initiative since it was created in 2023.

Julian earned her bachelor’s in animal and veterinary science from the University of Wyoming in 2016. She went on to obtain her master’s in animal science with a specialization in ruminant nutrition from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 2019.

For more information about agriculture and natural resources programming in Lincoln County, contact Julian at mbrinton@uwyo.edu or (307) 828-4093.

Share the Post:

Related Posts

Two deer in a sagebrush steppe landscape overlooking some houses.

New Research Shows How Much Space Between Houses Keeps Big Game Moving

Housing development is expanding, pushing homes into wild landscapes at an unprecedented pace.
Yet, as residential development moves into previously undeveloped areas, those same species face more than the direct loss of land under a building’s footprint—they also can lose access to the habitat surrounding those homes, multiplying the effective impact of each new structure. Without clear guidance on how much open space must be maintained between homes to conserve habitat for wildlife, new housing developments risk shrinking available habitat and fragmenting the movement pathways animals depend on to move between seasonal ranges.

Read More
Scott Shaw holds up a plastic bottle.

Shaw Receives UW’s George Duke Humphrey Award

When it comes to University of Wyoming faculty recognition, it’s hard to beat the past two years for Department of Ecosystem Science and Management Professor Scott Shaw.
After receiving the 2025 John P. Ellbogen Lifetime Teaching Award that recognizes the long, distinguished, and exemplary career of one senior faculty member who has excelled as a teacher at UW, Shaw has been selected as the recipient of the 2026 George Duke Humphrey Distinguished Faculty Award, the university’s top faculty honor.

Read More

Help us improve this website!

We’re working to make AgNews easier to use and more useful for you. This quick survey takes about 1–2 minutes.