|
subscribe
to the Organic Broadcaster:
One year (six issues) $20. Two years (twelve issues) $38
return to archive list
MOSES Homepage
"Cattle
in the corn, pigs in the pasture"
March-April 2002
by Paul Bransky ©2002 Midwest Organic and Sustainable Education Service
"Don't whine about high commodities. Feed pasture." That's
the philosophy of Dan Specht, a certified organic farmer with the
CROPP meat pool who raises beef cattle and hogs on 150 acres of
pasture and grazed row crops in northeast Iowa. "Nothing beats
perennial plants for not spending money. There's nothing to plant,
and the animals do all the fertilizing."
Specht's
presentation at the recent Upper Midwest Organic Farming Conference,
"Integrating Livestock into your Crop Rotation," detailed
his experience and experiments with New Zealand-style rotational
grazing, as well as insights from New Zealand graziers. Specht has
seen a gain of approximately 600 pounds per head of cattle from
May to February on an average of 1 1/2 acres, and raised ten litters
of hogs per acre per year.
"This
is a good use for marginal crop land," said Specht, who pastures
his livestock on side hills. He visited people in New Zealand whose
cattle gained about 4 1/2 pounds per day on low wet pastures only.
"No one feeds grain in New Zealand," Specht said, "there
are graziers with no tractors--just a holding pen, a milking parlor,
a bulk tank, and fences."
Timing plays a key role in Specht's success. He moves his herd to
new pasture every four days or sooner, to avoid parasite problems
and to leave enough root reserve for the plants to rebound. "Don't
be concerned about making it look like a hay field when you graze,"
said Specht, "westerners say take half and leave half, but
I think you'll gain more if you leave more than that because the
cows will be healthier and the plants will get better regrowth."
Specht referred to research in New Zealand on the life cycle of
round and stomach worms , which determined that infective larvae,
or "veligers" hatch after four days of egg incubation
in manure, and live as larvae for 21 to 24 days outside a host.
By grazing each paddock less than five days and not returning until
25 days after the last grazing, the New Zealanders were able to
prevent cattle ingestion of these parasites.
Specht
noted that this schedule fits well with the needs of pasture plants.
"The closer you graze grass, the less there is for the root.
If you run into a dry spell you need to have those reserves. And
legumes really respond to having 30 days for regrowth. If you do
grazing light the legumes actually strengthen." Specht said
some conventional graziers put nitrogen on ryegrass for a 14 day
return, but "last summer they ran into a brick wall (during
the drought) because nothing was left in the 'savings account.'"
Most
of Specht's pastures are old seedings of grass/legume mixes. He
got a tremendous stand of volunteer birdsfoot trefoil by stimulating
an old pasture with disking and chiselling. White and red clovers
also volunteer well, he said. For new seedings he likes Alice white
clover. "It's a good hardy pasture plant," said Specht,
"3/4 of the feed but 5% of the seed". Specht also plants
late varieties of orchard grass, "for better regrowth than
early orchard grass ,which grows rank and produces seedheads".
Also a little rye grass and brome grass.
For
his moveable fences Specht uses thin poly wire reeled on a five-dollar
crank tool, attached to 79-cent plastic posts. "Moving fences
is really simple," he said. For semi-permanent fencing, he
uses a single strand of 12 1/2 gauge high-tensile electric wire,
with strainers, attached to stripped black locust. "This is
easy compared to barbed wire. You don't need brace posts, You don't
need four or five strands, just one, and high tensile doesn't sag
so you can go twenty paces between posts, using 1/4 as many. The
wire costs $60/4000 ft., " cheaper per foot than wire that's
a lot thinner".
"
Once the cattle get used to a good hot fencer, they don't pressure
the fences," Specht said.
Grazing
Row Crops
Specht uses this fencing system in row crops also, saving time and
equipment costs by letting the livestock gather his harvest. In
early June last year he plowed and planted a thick drilling of corn,
cultivated once, then let cattle in to graze in September. "It
took three weeks for 104 cattle to do five acres." Twice a
day he knocked down corn with a tractor, then strung poly wire through
the opening. His rule of thumb is to give them only enough access
each time so that they are done eating ear corn within fifteen minutes.
After finishing the ears they devour the leaves and stalks. "When
the stalks are green it looks like a silage chopper went through,"
said Specht. Later in the year the cattle eat less stalks and he
gives them more access to grain-also good hay round bales and some
lush pasture near the corn that he rations out.
For
grain he chops barley for silage at the doughy seed stage, when
the stalks are still green. "My guess is it's close to corn
silage in energy," said Specht, "and barley straw is pretty
palatable, at 8.75 % protein." With an early spring in 2000
he was able to chop barley at the end of June, then replant that
field with soybeans on July 1st. He bagged the silage in the winter
pasture, and protected the end of the silage tube with moveable
wooden feeder panels.
Specht's hogs graze in a smaller pasture area than his cattle-five
acres compared to 130--to accommodate their instinct to return to
the same place every night. He noted that pigs also like lusher
pasture than cattle. "For pigs, nothing is richer in minerals
or vitamins than good legume pasture," he said, "and there's
no feed bill. The price is right."
When
it comes to putting pigs in corn, he is emphatic. "It is the
most natural thing in the world to hog down corn. There is no labor,
no manure handling, just water."
The
sows are bred all at once. "It is natural for them to farrow
together in a group. They have a herd instinct, and will run around
with 50 to 60 in a group," said Specht. He gives two pounds
of shell corn per day to gestating sows, and pushes the nursing
window to 6 weeks, until the "juvenile delinquent" stage
when they are getting out of fences. Then they move to a large hoop
building, open to the south for plenty of winter sun, with a feed
wagon and "bales of barley or oat straw that they chew on instead
of each other"
In
December they ate turnip greens from a thick field stand which stayed
green until a nine-degree freeze. "Cattle, hogs and sheep will
eat it, and turnip greens provide minerals, vitamins and protein,"
said Specht. He noted that pigs don't naturally like the root, but
he trained some to graze it by first offering it in their feed bunker.
It was planted August 15 after the hogs finished the corn. He disked
and rolled the field, broadcast turnip seed at two pounds/acre,
then rolled once again.
Specht
concluded his talk with a bit of advice. "A lot of organic
people belong to a grazing group in their area. You might be able
to borrow equipment, or get ideas-I strongly recommend joining one."
|