
On Pasture’s New Year’s Resolution is to help you develop a business vision and goals that ensure a happy, healthy life, and a grazing operation that gets you there. Creating a vision and goals, isn’t something that’s natural for most of us. So to make the process easier, we’ll be providing lots of examples. With that in mind, I’ve updated this article from our archives to show you examples of goal setting and how they turn into management actions. It might even help you see that you already have parts of your vision and goals, you just need to write them down and add to them.
Enjoy!
Is it possible to adapt mob grazing to work on large scales and native rangelands?
Like many of you, Jay and Krista Reiser asked that question as they consider the North Dakota ranch they hoped to take over. They thought that mob grazing had the potential to help them solve two problems:
2) Years of continuous, set stock grazing had reduced forage production and soil health. They thought that a mob grazing strategy with rotation, rest, and better distribution of manure and urine could reinvigorate the soil, improve forage quantity and quality and provide drought resistance.
Jay and Krista tried to find examples of other ranchers who had used mob grazing in situations such as theirs, but came up with very little. Thinking that others might benefit from what they learned by trying mob grazing on their ranch, they applied for a farmer/rancher grant for just under $6,000 from North Central SARE (Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education) and got to work.
The Ranch
Located in Washburn, North Dakota, the 2,700 acre Reiser Ranch is typical of many ranches on arid rangelands. Forage quality and quantity varies depending on precipitation, which averages about 16 inches a year, and on topography, with rolling hilltops being drier and supporting less forage, and draws and lowlands having more. Like most ranches this size it comes with very few cross fences. The combination is likely what keeps most ranchers from considering mob grazing.
Mob Grazing Terms
A couple of terms are useful here. The first is Stocking Rate. This is the number of acres needed to support one animal and depends on plant production and the size of the grazing animal. On rangelands this is typically defined as an Animal Unit Month where the base is the requirement to feed one 1,000 pound cow and her calf for one month. (For more on AUMs, here’s a link to an article with a calculator I built to help you quickly do the math.)
They went from this, the historic management of the ranch:
To this, using fencing, and without increasing the number of animals:
In practice it looked like the photos below. Notice that the concentration of animals changes depending on forage production. Animals are more concentrated when forage is thick and lush, and less concentrated when it isn’t as abundant.
What this means is there is a lot to learn. That’s why, based on their own experience, Jay and Krista say, “We would tell other ranchers to move into mob grazing slowly, and take the time to learn from others. Mob grazing takes a lot of time and you have to be willing to watch your cattle and make sure you’re evaluating their performance.”
This can be a big change if you’re accustomed to putting cattle out in the spring, moving them maybe a few times during the season and bringing them home in the fall. It means evaluating the day to day and season to season flow of your operation and making adjustments. Changing old routines can be challenging.
But is it worth it? And what’s involved?
Jay and Krista found that the number one advantage they got from mob grazing was rest. When pastures were no longer being continuously grazed, they had less bare ground and grew more forage that was healthier and more diverse. Plants are more vigorous after rest and now when they’re grazed, they respond better. Jay and Krista were able to rest this area as the cattle grazed elsewhere on the ranch.
The only difference in management between the before and after in the photos below is rest.
Here you can see different regrowth based on the management of rest and grazing.
In upcoming issues we’ll be looking at:
• how they planned their grazing,
• set up fencing and watering,
• how they knew when to move the cows to a new cell, and
• what they learned about trampled forage and more about their results.
Stay tuned!