Micro-Grazing

Management Brings Big Boost to Carrying Capacity

James and Barbara Strickland move their cow herd daily using a system of paddocks created with electric tape. (DTN/Progressive Farmer photo by Becky Mills)

James Strickland might have wanted to take some time off after he retired from his day job in 2010, but his neighbor had other ideas.

"A day or two after I retired, he showed up at my house and told me it was time to get my pastures ready," says the Chipley, Fla., producer. Strickland didn't put up too much of a fuss.

"My neighbor had about 40 cows on 28 acres. His cows were always in good shape, and it was unbelievable how little hay he fed," he says. Impressed by those results, Strickland decided it was time to rethink how he was using his pastures.

The first thing neighbor Christian Tibler did was measure Strickland's pastures. He already had his 16 acres of pasture divided into four sections of 4 acres each, which he used to rotate his small herd. He also has a couple more acres in rough ground and swampy land.

Tibler walked off half of each of those 4 acres, measuring four more minisections, or paddocks, in each half. Then he sent Strickland to buy wire and fenceposts.

The Daily Move

Strickland was able to keep a herd of 20 cows on the same ground where he used to keep five. He lets them graze for a day in each strip, then he takes down the electric tape and moves them to the next paddock. They can back-graze the paddocks they've just moved out of to access water, minerals and liquid supplements, but just for three days. After that, he moves them to the other side of the 4-acre pasture. By the time he goes through each strip in each 4-acre pasture, it is almost a month before he comes back to the original pasture and starts the process again.

During periods of lush growth, he'll double his grazing areas. He can divide each ministrip in half and get 60 days of grazing out of each rotation.

Bahiagrass is Strickland's permanent forage. The variety he prefers is Tifton 9, one of the more productive and durable varieties. Extra production is turned into a bonus hay crop, which he has custom-cut and baled.

"In the spring, I'll probably drill some millet in and some Argentine bahiagrass, too. The Tifton 9 stays green way into the fall. I need it to go dormant so my rye can come up," he says.

Jennifer Johnson, University of Georgia (UGA) beef nutrition researcher, cautions bahia can complicate overseeding. She points out that bahiagrass sod is compact and dense, making it very competitive. When overseeding winter annuals into sod, she reports it's typical to see greater success planting into bermudagrass sod rather than bahiagrass.

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Warm-Season Forages

As for warm-season annuals,Strickland's grazing system has tended to include millet.

"We had a pasture where we fed hay for four or five years," he says. "It was in bad shape. It is amazing how fast the millet grew."

He first bottom-plowed the pasture, which he uses as a sacrifice paddock when he doesn't have growing forage. He disked it lightly and then waited a month until rain softened the soil. He planted the millet lightly with a no-till drill the first of April. Four weeks later, cattle were grazing the pasture.

Strickland's county Extension agent, Mark Mauldin, says, "Pearl millet is a highly productive, high-quality forage. It helps James increase his stocking rate and does it fairly economically."

Strickland planted Tifleaf 3 millet at the rate of 25 pounds per acre, fertilizing it in mid-June with 200 pounds of blended fertilizer an acre. Seed and fertilizer costs combined were about $90 an acre.

Cold-Weather Plan

Winter is when Strickland's micrograzing system really shines.

"Our best pastures are in the winter, starting in February and going until mid-May," he says. He normally no-tills ryegrass and clover into the bahia sod, but some years he goes with Wrens Abruzzi grain rye seed and Big Boss ryegrass, aiming for even earlier grazing.

The last season that was the case he drilled 65 pounds per acre of rye seed Oct. 1. Because of the dry and warm conditions, he was reluctant to plant ryegrass at the same time. He waited until Oct. 30, then broadcast 25 pounds of ryegrass and 200 pounds of blended fertilizer per acre. Seed and fertilizer costs combined were $95 an acre.

The freakishly warm fall that year meant the Tifton 9 bahiagrass never really went dormant and competed with the rye. It was the first week in December before Strickland could turn his cows out on it. He went back to clover in the next year's mix.

"I love clover. The cows do well on it. When the calves nurse, you can see the milk dripping down," he says.

In the fall-grazing gap, when bahia normally goes dormant and before winter annuals reach grazing height, Strickland puts cows in a 2-acre sacrifice paddock for six to eight weeks. They get good-quality hay and a free-choice high-energy liquid supplement, Mix 30, which is a blend of corn and/or soy coproducts, containing 16% protein and 10% fat. Normally, the herd will consume a roll of hay a day during this period.

Besides a brief hay-feeding period, Mauldin says Strickland's grazing system has another big bonus: His annual soil tests call for very little additional fertilizer beyond what he applies when no-tilling in his winter-grazing forages.

"His system forces the cows to spread the manure across the field evenly," says the county agent. Strickland does drag his paddocks when cows are through grazing them, a practice Mauldin points out breaks up the manure piles but doesn't do much to spread them. Most of the benefit is from the grazing program itself.

Several Pluses

Mauldin is a fan of Strickland's grazing system for more than the nutrient distribution. He says the producer almost has three systems in one the way he works his program.

"He has mob- and strip-grazing systems within a rotational-grazing system. He gets really high forage utilization. He has been able to increase his carrying capacity to way less than an acre per animal because he uses the forage so efficiently," he explains.

UGA's Johnson agrees. "With rotational grazing, you can better manage your forages so as to not over- or undergraze them. You can, as we like to say, get the goodie out of them."

Johnson's coworker, UGA extension forage specialist Dennis Hancock, adds: "Rest periods allow plants to produce new leaves, which collect energy, transform it into sugars and store these sugars. More leaves can be produced following the next grazing cycle. Not only is regrowth potential improved, but root depth and stand life are improved, as well."

The two biggest drawbacks of an intensive rotational system, Johnson explains, are the up-front cost of supplies, including a watering system, and the ongoing cost of time and labor.

For Strickland, the start-up cost was around $800, which was minimized since he already had his 16-acre pasture crossfenced with gates and a lane with a water trough and mineral feeder in place.

As for labor, he says, "Once you get it set up, it takes no time at all. You do have to be there every day to move the cows. It takes me maybe 15 minutes every morning. But you need to look at your cows and calves, and eyeball them anyway."

Strickland's wife, Barbara, grew up on a family dairy and swore she wouldn't touch his cattle. However, she's been won over and helps James move the cows when needed.

Looking back, Strickland says he's more than glad his neighbor didn't let him coast in retirement.

"This helps me be a better steward of the land. You get the most benefit you can from your pastures. There is a savings. I'm probably spending the same on 20 cows on 16 acres as anybody who has seven to eight cows."

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