Site icon On Pasture

Teaching Cattle To Graze Like Goats

Not so long ago, I visited Mike Roberts, the ranch manager at Waldron Ranch in Alberta, Canada. Mike is definitely one of those outside-the-box thinkers. As a great example, he is teaching his cattle to be goats to control woody species invasion on native rangelands.

On part of the ranch, he has developed about 50 paddocks for a one-graze-a-year grazing cell on native rough fescue rangeland. Each paddock is 40-50 acres and he runs 700-800 yearlings on typically 3-day rotation.

By using strategic placement of salt & mineral feeders in brush patches, he not only delivers animal impact but is also teaching the cattle they can aggressively browse the brush as well. They are mostly dealing with western snowberry (aka buckbrush in AB & BC) and ground juniper.

The mineral feeder is placed in a patch of the buckbrush. There is loose salt in one tire and trace minerals in the other tire.

After three days of grazing, the brush around the feeder site has been trampled close to the feeder and heavily browsed moving away from the feeder. You can see the undisturbed brush at the center of the photo where the feeder was setting for contrast. Note that ample post-grazing residual of the rough fescue has been left behind.

This patch of buckbrush was over 100 yards from the mineral feeder placement, but it has also been fully browsed by cattle while in the paddock. Mike noted that while it initially takes the placement of the feeder in a brush patch to get the yearlings to eat the brush, after a few weeks in the grazing cell they begin browsing woody species much more aggressively than do cattle out on the open rangelands.

Ground juniper is another encroaching woody species common on these foothill rangelands. The cattle do not graze it as readily as they do the buckbrush, but they can deliver significant animal impact on the juniper patches as well.

When I was there, Mike was using just one feeder per herd. It is his intention to build many more feeders this winter and use 3 feeders per herd next year to be able to impact more areas in each grazing event.

________________________________________

Note from Kathy: My experience with cattle trained to eat weeds was that they also became very good at eating brush. Here’s a link to my experience with cattle and brush.

Exit mobile version