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MiG basics: Layout and Design of Grazing Cells Jim Gerrish American GrazingLands Services LLC Patterson, Idaho V.2012
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Basis for pasture subdivision Management control & flexibility Pasture rest Quality control Grazing efficiency Feed budgeting Nutrient cycle
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Basis for subdivision Management control & flexibility Pasture rest Quality control Grazing efficiency Feed budgeting Nutrient cycle The more you need to control these things….... the more subdivision you need
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Considerations before you begin subdividing pastures Develop your goals Evaluate your resources Work with the terrain Consider irrigation interface Plan several options Consider costs and benefits Begin implementation
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Fixed grazing cell design Uses permanent fence and watering points Subdividing pastures
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A permanent fence is 1 or 2 electrified hi- tensile wires on solid ends and corners with line posts the wildlife can’t knock the wire off. For sheep and goats use three wires !
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Wood-Plastic Composite or hollow plastic line posts are first choice Self insulating Flexible Stays in the ground Light weight
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Permanent stock water points Becomes the focal point of animal behavior in pasture
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Laying permanent pipe
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Example of a fixed system on 260 acres
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Example of a fixed grazing cell design on 1400 acres
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Larger grazing units have lower per acre costs for permanent fencing
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Water development cost per cow for continuous and rotationally pastures
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l Fixed design ç Uses permanent fence and watering points Advantages: Relatively low cost on large installations Minimal daily labor Low maintenance Disadvantages: Relatively high cost on small operations Limited management flexibility Subdividing pastures: fixed design
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l Fixed design ç Uses permanent fence and watering points l Flexible design ç Uses portable fence and water facilities in a framework of permanent fence Subdividing pastures:
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l Flexible design ç Uses portable fence and water facilities in a framework of permanent fence Subdividing pastures: flexible design
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Over-the-surface waterline with Quick Coupler valve
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Size of tank depends on # of head & recharge rate
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Why smaller tanks can work with large herds Tank from previous slide 330 ft 500 pairs
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Portable fence is easy work ! If you use the right tools !!
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Basic tools are polybraid on geared reel and step-in posts
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If we were doing it again
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l Flexible design ç Uses portable fence and water facilities in a framework of permanent fence Advantages: Maximum management flexibility Lower initial capital cost Works well on rented land Disadvantages: More daily labor required More maintenance Subdividing pastures: flexible design
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Making allocation easy 435 ft
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Making allocation easy 435 ft Use 50 ft post spacing
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Making allocation easy 435 ft Use 50 ft post spacing… then every post equals 1/2acre
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Flexible grazing corridors Can work with any width corridor Just adjust post spacing between 40-80 ft to get an even increment
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Making it fit ½ A 300 ft @ 72’ 400 ft @ 54’ 500 ft @ 43’ Making it fit 1 A 600 ft @ 72’ 800 ft @ 54’ 1000 ft @ 43’
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Some grazing cell examples from around the country
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The Gerrish Farm in Linn Co. MO
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If we were doing it again
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Circle Pi Ranch – Patterson Unit
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Rotation plan for when I’m gone I’ll set up several fences for 2-day moves Paddock size based on biweekly pasture inventory Lots of flexibility!
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One-time flood ground grazing during growing season
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Flood irrigated meadow – 540 A
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Begin strip grazing away from water point Try to keep stock from ‘back grazing’ more than 3-5 days during growing season Stock can back graze for a few weeks in the dormant season
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Flood meadow used for winter swath grazing
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Expected range production based on Soil Survey
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2640 acre range unit Mixed native & seeded range No interior fence One water source 7.2 AUD/A Winter 2004-5: 450 cows for 42 days
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Grazing pattern in first year of winter grazing Poor grazing distribution Higher supplement costs More hay fed
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2640 acre range unit Summer 2005 installed stock water system Drilled well & expanded spring development Still no interior fence 13.6 AUD/A Winter 2005-6: 800 cows for 45 days
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2640 acre range unit Summer 2006 installed subdivision fences Basically created 16 160 A paddocks 29 AUD/A Winter 2007-8: 900 cows for 85 days
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2640 acre range unit Winter 2008-9:1200 cows for 100 days May have pushed it too hard ! 45.5 AUD/A
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Five years ago this ranch fed 2 ½ to 3 tons of hay/cow every winter In 2007-8 they fed 300 lb/cow
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Simple grazier’s math 900 cows Add 40 more days of grazing Grazing saves $1/day Annual saving is $36,000 What did the fence cost ? $33,046.81
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Sieben Livestock Cascade, Montana
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This is their terrain 60,000 deeded acres 90,000 public land acres How do you subdivide pastures here?
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5000 acre foothill-forest pasture Cattle were concentrating along creek
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Is there a place for temporary fence on rangeland ? The Lloyd Fence
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5-mile polywire fence to separate upper range from lower range in 5000 acre pasture Increased grazing capacity 40%
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Winter grazing unit at Sieben Livestock Five section pasture & range unit Four large pastures Limited stock water availability
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Winter grazing unit at Sieben Livestock Five section pasture & range unit Took one section as trial area for winter MiG
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Winter grazing unit at Sieben Livestock
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“3 years of MiG did more for range health than 20 years of rest- rotation” Chase Hibbard, 2009 Sieben Livestock
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Summary Similar strategies work in many different environments We just adjust the tools we use
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Contact information Jim Gerrish JRGerrish@americangrazinglands.com JRGerrish@a 208-876-4067 http://www.americangrazinglands.com
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