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¡NUEVO CONTENIDO ACTUALIZADO SEMANALMENTE!

Gene Ausland

Rancher

“When somebody asks me about it, I tell them it's a lot of hard work; it takes a lot of dedication, but in the long run it's going to pay off big time because you're going to have grass when you need it.”

Amy Cammack

Rancher

“When we move our cattle because they're used to the rotational grazing you just go to the gate and holler “come boss, come boss.” and they are ready to go through and shut the gate behind them. It works really well; you can move them on and make sure grass grows better. We're seeing very good benefits.”

Sandy Limpert

Rancher

“We're in Northwest South Dakota where the old-timers say we have a drought three years out of ten, and that's probably close to right. Our theory is to keep a lot of pastures with a lot of old growth ahead of us. Everybody I've talked to, that has done this rotational grazing for longer than we have, say they've yet to reach their potential; the pastures continue to get better and better.”

Stewart Schmidt

Rancher

“We get credit for being Cowboys, or we get credit for being horsemen, or cattlemen, but really what we are is grazers. We are grass managers. We use cattle or buffalo or sheep or horses or whatever we use as a tool to be able to market it and that's what we've found a way to market grass through cattle and in using the cattle to benefit the grass.”

Dominic Harmon

“I don't think there's any one shoe fits all for a rotational grazing system, depends on what grasses you have and what paddocks. Because you got certain species in certain areas, so you can graze early, and then you've got species you can graze later that are good late season feed. I think I've increased production by around 90 to 100 percent on a lot of the paddocks.”

Dan Anderson

“Then we got into an EQIP contract. Split our pastures up even more, hot wire, because we were on both sheep and cattle. We run four smooth wires and a couple of more hot. We just noticed the more rest you give a plant, the more root system it develops, the more growth it gives on top, the greater resilience it has when it is either eaten or drought comes in. It'll snap back.”

Chris Bowlander

Rancher

“If I’m riding across land that I haven’t ridden across, the first thing I look for now is soil. I look down. Can I see soil? And I know now that’s bad news. I want to look down and not see soil. I look for variety of species of the grasses. It gets addictive, truly, to look at different species of grass.”

Steve Davis

“We’re not a very big operation…. we run anywhere from about 70 to 100 hunters through, and we’re harvesting anywhere from 300 to 400 birds in a season. Obviously with all the grasses that we have, that’s a beautiful place for birds nesting. I’ve noticed just being out there’s a lot of hens with a lot of little ones running behind them, and that’s a good thing to see.”

Mike McKernan

Summit Lake Project

“We’re not here just for the cows. I guess I look at the cows as using the tool to help manage the grass so we can get good production from our cows. We get good cover for the wildlife. And compared to a lot of other pastures that are around, we find more wildlife out in here than you do in other areas where they’re just not managing the grass.”

Bruce Haerter

Rancher

"Over the last 20 plus years, we've converted a lot of acres away from crop into grasslands. We have lots of cross fencing. We do rotate our cattle. There'll be times where we use acres more and then maybe for a year, don't use them at all. If I could give somebody some advice, what I would say is go to the people that live and work with grassland conservation and water and all those things. Cause there are those people out there. They're easy to talk to."

Ray Effling

Rancher

"We winter a few cows that we own of our own. And then we custom graze. We've done the slow moves we've done. The fast moves. We like them all. Our primary goals when we are moving these cattle is the soil health. Moving the cattle through and letting the plants recover, all our paddocks, we try to give a 60 day rest, no matter where we're at, we've seen where that has really benefited the soil and benefited the cattle."

Robert Boylan

Rancher

"Cattle and sheep out here. Honestly, I think I I've run the cattle so I can wear a cowboy hat. I run the sheep to make the payments. I believe it was 2012 that I realized the importance of rest and rotate. Cause we just didn't get a use in pastures because there wasn't water. We've probably got close to 60 miles of pipeline put in. I've built 120 reservoirs the last four years, got probably close to 80 water tanks on the place. Water distribution is the best thing you can do for grasslands."

Dave Grassel

Rancher

"Tyler Moore and I've been best friends for about 20 years. We had the opportunity to rent some grass together. We approached the land owner and told them that if we were given the opportunity to rent the land, that we would rotational graze on it. And they took us up on that. We underbid some fellow ranchers, but we offered a rotational graze and they thought that'd be a better deal for everybody in the long run."

Jon Smikle

Rancher

"My dad and grandfather did a great job setting this place up for rotational grazing. Take half leave half. We have 54 tanks on the place, so our water situation is amazing. Without a lot of labor, we can just put more cattle in the pastures for shorter amount of time and just move them faster. It's amazing how resilient range land is. If you're not continuously overgrazing it year after year, it, it heals pretty fast."

Charlie Totton

Rancher

"We went to just a lot of these one-day classes like ranchers workshops and pasture walks, and then we finally went on some bus trips that the NRCS and Extension Service put on, when you're on a pasture walk or a bus trip, you know, you're on the guy's place; You can see if it's working or not. Learning or knowledge is probably the most important thing."

John Rittberger

Rancher

"Our grandparents homesteaded this land in 1909, my father stayed on the place, and then we took over from there. Our goal for grazing is to always leave grass. We love grass. I like looking out on a pasture that looks good even after we take cattle off. Having an inventory of what's in a pasture has really helped me…knowing how many AUMS are in each pasture is really beneficial."

Bart Carmichael

Rancher

"Pastures range from 30 acres to 160 acres. Move cattle sometimes every day, but at least every week. Try to give everything of rest of at least 14 months on our pastures to give it a chance to recover, rest. Trying to graze all year long. Trying to have pasture that can be grazed any time of the year and have a cow that'll do it with the management grazing, we've seen an increase in wildlife and increase in plants."

Amy Cammack

Rancher

"When we had that terrible drought, we had a new pasture every week in that way we had 13 weeks worth of grazing and every week they have new grass and every time you put them on fresh grass and makes them eat grow better, milk better, look better. Every year you start in a different pasture so that you're grazing at a different time."

Randy and Jean Shultz

"If the cattle are on the same pasture they’re going to keep eating their favorite plant and those plants will disappear and decrease, and the less desirable plants will come in. You get more diversity with your cool season and warm season grasses as you move your cattle and have shorter duration grazing. With the cross-fencing, with the more pastures, we’ll see warm seasons grasses come in. They may not have been evident for fifty years, but the grass is still there and it comes back. I don’t know how to measure the improvement in the soil, but I’m sure there’s an improvement."

John Shubek

Rancher

"I just got really interested in sustainable practices and how to maintain the land. It’s enhanced our profitability. Rotational grazing worked great. This year we’ve been doing daily moves, just trying to better manage what they’re eating and manage the grass, give it an opportunity to recover you see how the more you move the cows, the better the cows stay in condition, the better the grass and the ground stays in condition."

Kristen Johnson

Rancher

"When we’re going out and we’re moving cattle from one pasture to the next, you can just see how it benefits both the grass and the --how much better nutritionally we can offer different grasses to our cattle by letting that grass rest. And see the cows get excited. They want to come. They want that new grass. You can see a very big difference in what some of the more continual grazed systems versus our rotations,—you can see a big difference in your stand of grass, in the healthier cattle, in the wildlife, in all of it."

Joel Erickson

Rancher

"The last couple years we’ve seeded full-season cover crops just for grazing. The cows are a great recycler. Those deep-rooted brassicas pull up nutrients, and then run them through the cows, we’re not afraid to put up electric fence and we can haul water, too, if we need to. We do that quite a bit for fall grazing. It’s cheaper to haul water than it is to haul feed, so that’s why we really like the fall grazing or the winter grazing, as long as winter will allow."

Dustin Jewett

NRSC Soil Health Specialist

"The programs that we offer through the NRCS, the main ones, you know, we have EQIP, we have CSP, CRP, we can do practices like waterline, tanks, windbreaks, trees, fences, ponds, seeding, If you have cropland that isn’t producing that great or you want to convert it back to grass for soil health we can cost-share anywhere between 75 and 90 percent cost-share on a lot of these practices. Practices that really help out our area are fences, waterlines, and windbreaks."

Beau Bendigo

Rancher

"We sat down and we made plans where we needed water—we got the water where we needed it with pipelines and big water tanks, and then we went to cross-fencing so we could utilize rotation. The cross-fencing has been tremendous once we got it in place—we can put cows in there for twenty-one days and they’ll utilize more of the pasture, and then you kick them in the next place and they have fresh grass."

Chris Bohlander

Rancher

"We keep evolving. I know with the cross-fencing and temporary fence and water we can do a much better job, utilize that, improve—improve the diversity there. We’re also using temporary water, running pipe above ground for temporary moving cattle around. It’s exciting. I can’t get enough of it."

Tanse Herman

NRCS - Soil Health Specialist

"Grass is abundant. That’s not by accident. When we dig a hole and study the soil. It almost has a cottage cheese type structure. That soil texture allows water to infiltrate rapidly, where water and air can freely move.  That plant stand was very, very healthy and the impact of grazing was absolutely beneficial."

Jody Brown

Rancher

“We try to leave about half the ranch stockpile winter grazing ground, we used to just cut it every year and haul it off into a stack, and now we graze it with the yearlings on a daily move. I don't see a lot of people jumping into this type of grazing. It's easy just to keep doing it the way you are, but I think a constant urge to learn is probably the best thing you can do.”

Bart Carmichael

Rancher

“My grandpa, when he had cattle here, pretty much just grazed in the draws. We've changed that to where they go into a spot and graze it out in two or three days, and then they're moved to a new spot. We're getting them more variation, more biodiversity out there, it's a lot healthier system.”

Eli Little

“So when we first started with rotational grazing, we rotated cattle every five days and 45 acres and now we are down to six or seven acres sometimes, and moving them once a day, we would like to go two times a day and do a lot more intensive grazing that way. You'll really see a lot of improvement if you're able to manage that way.”

Reid Suelflow

Farmer

“As far as my rotation, I have three different groups of pastures, and there’s several smaller pastures within each group, and I try to rest one group for the full growing season. Then I graze the other two groups. It’s much healthier than they've been in the past and just rotating them as fast as I do, it's just a cleaner environment for them, and they just seem to be doing better.”

Van Mansheim

“As I became more passionate about my crop lands soil health, I started hearing these things about range land. I'm starting to realize the correlation of the soil health principles and how important the livestock integration is the same way, and diversity's the same way. Keeping the soil covered with armor, having a green living plant as long as you can during the year.”

Louis Bergner

Rancher

“A few years ago we bought a pasture up north, it’d been overgrazed for quite a few years, so that was kind of the area that I started with the cross-fencing and rotational grazing, to try and get that back into better use. There was like bare spots in the pastures and as I did the rotational grazing those bare spots would fill in and you’d notice a lot more litter on the ground there to hold the moisture.”

Shad Larson

“I can’t say enough good about this land. Different species of grasses and that was a learning curve on my side I’ve come along with the tours out here they put on and this was the first pasture that dad and I have ever introduced rotating. There’s always ups and downs, but let me tell you, it’s more positive than negative over here.”

Kristen Johnson

“I guess it is just kind of fun for me too, when we’re going out and we’re moving cattle from one pasture to the next, you can just see how it benefits both the grass and the cattle because you can see how much better nutritionally, we can offer different grasses to our cattle by letting that grass rest. And see the cows get excited. They want to come. They want that new grass.”

Candice Olson-Mizera

“Moving cattle calving back to April has greatly reduced stress as far as calving. And then rotationally grazing, we decided to have one bunch, to rotationally graze and trample more and have the cows be not so picky, so that they ate what they were given and then we could move them. I think we’ve seen tremendous grass improvement just because of the rest that the pastures have when you’re in a smaller area.”

Brad Magness

Rancher

"We do rotationally graze with the object in mind that we want to utilize cool season grasses, which we have a predominance of, and rest the warm season grasses so that they don't get exclusively grazed out by continuous grazing. Our management style is probably different than a lot of people because we don't manage for profit. We manage for stewardship and have learned that if you're good stewards that is profitable."

Justin Thompson

Rancher

"I remember Ryan coming out and advising us. It was pretty much just three pastures on that whole place. We formulated the plan and started building cross fences. And I started attending grassland schools, I got really excited about improving the range. We started changing our season of use and our rotation. I wouldn't say we're drought proofed but we can handle a dry year now and before we could not."

Doug Hansen

Rancher

"We've been on this place since 1964. I guess restoration is in my blood. We restore wagons and, build stagecoaches and I've become more keenly interested in the restoration of the grasslands. It's a value to restore that to its native state. On the production side, as we gain a more native grasses and Forbes, we also see the production go up. So it's kind of a, win-win."

Dugan Bad Warrior

Rancher

"I met a guy in rapid city and he says, ”I'm a grass farmer, how I harvest my grass is through cows.” And that really stood out to me. I was like, yeah, he's right. I've done some rotational grazing in smaller paddocks. When I go for a walk, now I try to look for some of the species that tell me that my grasses or my pastures are healthy. There's always better ways to manage your ground. If you just change your paradigm to see that it can be so much better for you."

Van Mansheim

Farmer

"I'm not a rancher by any means, but the cropland is something farmers assess every day. Rangeland doesn't become a priority to a lot of guys, but I learned that we need to make it a priority. …And even with as dry as we've been, the cover crops are just flourishing because of the diversity. And I think if we can make my rangeland more diverse, we make ourselves more drought tolerant, more resilient."

Reid Suelflow

Farmer

"I probably move my cows on average every three to four days. At times everyday… I have three different groups of pastures, and there's several smaller pastures within each group, and I try to rest one group for the full growing season, I feel like it gives some of the native species the full year break to maybe get more established because when you turn the cows out in the pasture that's the first thing they go for."

Sandy Limpert

Rancher

"We run the buffalo herd all in one large here. We have about thirty two pastures that we rotate them through, so they're only in a pasture five six seven days, and they don't come back to that pasture till the following year, we utilize the pastures at different times every year. It's had a tremendous effect on the vigor of the plants. We've just seen tremendous differences in the pastures as opposed to the way we used to graze them."

Dan Connor

Rancher

"I would recommend to a young producer to go with some sheep…you can run sheep were a cow wouldn't even want a be, and they're quite a little cheaper to get into, we don't over stock. we try to keep the numbers at a workable level… And they don't use all the grass, it's kind of real rule take half and leave half, and we try to follow that… Wildlife seems to have something to eat too."

Simone Wind

Rancher

"It’s a difficult place to ranch, but it’s ours now and we’re trying to make it better. We’ve gone from the original fifteen pastures to thirty pastures ranging from 25 to 40 acres. When we’re finished we’ll have over sixty pastures. We’ve installed twenty-five miles of electric fence, mostly two-wire. We’ll have another twenty-five miles put in before the end of the project. That type of a system allows the diversity to increase. When we first got here we didn’t have a lot of diverse forage --no nettle, saltbush, or winterfat, and forbs were few and far between. Now there is much more of a diversity in our grasslands."

Alan Wind

Rancher

"Our optimum grazing time is three to five days. We try to be in a cell and out of the cell within that period of time. That’s followed by 750 days of rest. So the rest of that grazing season we don’t go back in a second time, the next year it’s completely undisturbed, and then that third year, we try to shift the season of use."

Brett Blank

Game, Fish, and Parks

"Years ago we used to never really manage our grasslands. They were just left idle and the diversity was not there, it was pretty much a monoculture of bluegrass and smooth brome. We started integrating cattle into our management and we’re starting to see great improvements on our grassland. There’s proof in the pudding if you just come out and look on some of these areas, the diversity in the plants, the birds, the animals. You have a lot better hunting opportunity out here because of the cattle doing what they’re doing on the ground versus if we just did absolutely nothing."

Mike McKernan

Rancher

"This all fits all right into what I believe in and the way I like to live. I like to hunt. I like to fish. Anything I do with the cattle generally involves looking at it from the conservation side as well. I can still get good benefits, the cattle can still get me where we want to be, and I can still have good wildlife habitat. A long-term success would be having a high diversity of plants; it’s diversity. Diversity in grasses, diversity in the insects, diversity in the birds. If we’ve got multiple species of all of them out there, then I think we’re being successful."

Ed Blair

Rancher

"We started out really small, running 45-50 head of replacement heifers and rotating that and, within four or five years I was seeing some big changes out there. I says, “Man, this works. You know, we need to start doing some more of this, the big thing that I think I’ve seen is diversity, but also groundcover. Unless the soil is really bad, we don’t have any bare spots."

Stacy Turgeon

NRCS Soil Health Specialist

"And having cattle out on grass, rotational grazing, you know, if you’re doing it right it’s helping the water infiltrate. The water’s actually going in the ground where you want it for grass production. Introducing livestock, getting them out there and aftermath grazing, it just stimulates the soil biology and it’s really, really important to keep us sustainable and productive for the long haul."

Fannie Fritz

Supervisor

"Everything we do is a partnership. we’ve developed a partnership with US Fish and Wildlife Service because if you have grass and you just leave it alone and you don’t do anything with it, it’s going to diminish. The best thing you can do is put livestock on grass because you have the foot action, you have the grazing, you have the interaction with the wildlife. The best thing you can do is put livestock, especially cattle, out there."

Rod Voss

NRCS Grazing Land Management Specialist

"We know that rest grows grass, and when we’re going through a system twice through we’re taking very little amount the first time through. We’re leaving a lot of leaf area for that grass to regrow. The second time through then we can take our proper use out of that grass and still leave enough residual cover for that grass to maintain its health and vigor. It’s been good for the grass, it’s been good for the livestock, and the cooperator that’s running the cattle out here."

Gene Ausland

Rancher

"We graze only one pasture once a year and then they rest for another year. We move cattle from anywhere from five to ten days.I'm out in a pasture every day checking grasses to see when we should move. We try to leave anywhere from four to six inches of grass standing in the pasture every year."

Gary Cammack

Rancher

“When it comes to rotation, rotating pastures, it can be difficult to move cattle, but it's easy to let cattle move themselves. Different things that we've done over the years we can see a difference in weaning weights we can see a difference in herd health overall success in the cattle business is doing a thousand little things right.”

Dan Connor

Rancher

“We try to manage our numbers, we don’t over stock. We don't use all the grass, and wildlife seems to have something to eat too. We put in several miles of new fence with NRCS cooperation and the BLM. It cut the size and pastures down so we rotate more, and it seems to help with the grass production.”

John Rittberger

“The main thing to protect us against drouth, main thing we do is always leave grass after we leave the pasture, and if we have to sell cattle or look for a land to lease, well, we've learned you've got to do it. You can't, you can't take all the grass. We rotate them through summer, but not only that, we rotate through the winter.”

Charlie Totton

Rancher

“When we added our mob grazing, we figured out it only took half as much land to some of the cows. So instead of running twice as many cows, we extended our grazing season by four months. So now, we only feed cows two or three months out of winter instead of five or six. Same amount of cows in the same place but just a difference in management we gained, that much grazing season.”

Josh Lefers

“I don't think anyone's an expert on soil microbiology, the best I've found is, you look above the ground, and you look at healthy soil indicators. Digging, bringing a spade, digging your soil up and looking at soil structure and measuring that infiltration. All those things are going to give you indicators of, whether you're providing the right conditions for your soil microbiology. Ultimately what we hope to see is more production.”

Britton Blair

Rancher

“Any ranch that we go to, has a lot of different pastures sizes, you run different herd sizes at different places. And I feel like we just stick to our basic principles and our basic way that we want the grass to look, but you’re always changing, like the number of days that you’re in a pasture and that’s really been fun.”

Jack Davis

Rancher

“Another practice that we did was went to weaning early. We wean the 1st of September. That’s really saved on grass, and those cows, once they’re weaned, can winter pretty good on the grass and crop residue. And now that we’ve introduced cover crops, some of that, too. And the rotation has really helped bring in the natives really show that big bluestem and how that’s recovered just by having its rest and rotation.”

James Erickson

“It helps to have both sides, to have cattle and crops. You know, you’ve got crops to feed the cattle and the cattle to help feed the crops and your soil, to help benefit soil health and what not. And then we do a lot of stuff with cover crops to help kind of diversify everything, and that makes it a lot easier on the cattle operation, too, for grazing purposes.”

AJ Heiss

Cattle Manager

"When I came on to the place, they just bought the ranch. We put it directly into an intensive grazing system, which my goal was to rotate, rest and recover. We basically made three pastures into 10 separate, different pastures. When we go back in every pasture, we'll get at least 90 days of rest and recovery time. The cattle have benefited from it. The pounds per gain have benefited and we've ran, I would say 40% more cattle on a rotation program as opposed to running a season long grazing."

Mark Hollenbeck

Rancher

"We've been developing our water and fences for the better part of 10 years now, and focusing on proper management as well as our hunting business. We're always dry, but part of the reason we have grass is that we have been actively managing for grass. So all these plants that are really nutritious were grazed out and by managing, we're getting those plants to come back. We're getting them to come back by giving proper rest."

Crystal Neuharth

Rancher

"Duane Beck always told us stop and walk out into nature and just have a look, see what she's been doing. She's been doing it best for way longer than we have. If we can take in what we're seeing, and a lot have to do with the five principles of soil health. If you can take what you learned from mother nature and apply it to what we're doing, you can become more successful and your crops and your grass should be resilient and recover well."

Tyler Moore

Rancher

"I was recommended to go to a grazing school and that grazing school was a huge, huge part of getting to where we're at today. One thing that I really noticed… been doing a lot of grass testing, sending in grass clippings and the nutrient nutritional value of the grass when you're letting that grass rest for 60 days that top 25% of that grass holds so much more nutritional value than if you continuously graze."

Abby Smikle

Rancher

"And from a wife and a mom perspective, I've noticed a huge difference in the way that my husband is handling the cattle herd. He knows where he's going to put them in why he's going to move that herd into that pasture. At that time, we have two boys. They're full of energy. They're fully aware of the ground around them and their dad is sharing that knowledge so that they end up with more information to make this place better than what they inherited."

Dwayne Beck

Rancher

"The outcomes are what we're really looking for. We can't get to that outcome with no-till alone, we can't get to that outcome with cover crops alone. We can't get to that outcome, in my opinion, with rotations that aren't diverse. Can I cycle the nutrients without having a perennial? No, I don't think we can. After 20 some years, I have pretty good evidence we can’t."

Stewart Schmidt

Rancher

"My great grandfather Charles Schmidt came here in 1910… This is a reservation…And a lot of the things that we do today really are quite similar to what they had developed early on in the 20s 30s 40s… We calve more in sync with nature… rotational grazing and moving your cattle. we try to mimic, you know, our operation on to be in sync with nature… I think that it it gets managed as a holistic operation, and I think that that's kind of where we are today."

Eli Little

Rancher

"My dad and I have been farming together basically since I got out of college. We do corn, beans, wheat, cover crops. We have cattle and sheep, hogs, chickens, and we try to integrate everything that that we do and getting cattle out on cover crops and getting them out on all of our fields and trying to improve our soil health. it's kind of our number one priority around here."

Jody Brown

Rancher

"Just growing more grass, giving it more time to rest, I think is a big deal and gives us more of a grass bank for a drought year. We were talking the other day about how many cattle we're running in a certain pasture we leased, and we've got it split into quarter mile strips now, and we were running about a cow to two acres in the grazing, and now, it's 1.4, so that's a real increase in production with very minimal."

Alan Wind

Rancher

"When we bought this place we could barely run 130 pairs on the whole ranch. Now we’re running 160 pair on half the ranch and the other half is set aside for drought, it’s set aside for hailstorms, it’s set aside for just growing and resting, deeper roots, more litter, shade, less grasshoppers."

Candace Olson-Mizera

"We went all no-till and planted cover crops and started rotational grazing here in the last five years. We’ve really intensified our rotational grazing and use of cover crops. The cows are in a smaller area, so the rest of the pastures have all got time to grow. That’s made a huge difference; it’s just improved our lives in so many different ways that time management—and efficiencies and profitability, and just improving the water infiltration and the holding capacity. we’re just trying to drought-proof the farm is what we’re trying to do."

Pete Bauman

South Dakota Stat University Extension

"A lot of times we think about crops, we think about regenerative agriculture. Well, there’s nothing more regenerative than the grassland, the biological relationships between the cattle, the grazing, the microbes, the fungi, their saliva, defecating, their urinating, nitrogen cycling, all of these things make just perfect sense. I think this emerging science with that relationship is really going to continue to help people understand that healthy systems need healthy animals, and vice-versa. healthy humans are part of that story as well."

Bernie Davis

Rancher

"I come out here practically every day to take care of the cattle or do the rotating, moving cattle. When they see the four-wheelers they come to you and you can open the gate and they will pretty well go through. In the rotational grazing we try and do it about every two to three weeks, depending on the size of the pasture, and that has tremendously helped on the grasses. The cattle seem a lot better, they seem healthier, the calves seem healthier. It’s been a good thing for us to do."

Jack Davis

Rancher

"We were counting it up here the other day, close to ten miles of fence and also probably a mile or so of waterlines. And so the water and the fence has helped us reduce the amount of hay that we’ve had to feed, and we’ve moved to using more grass for feeding and can rotate more and stockpile some for the winter, not put up as much hay. And diversity has really improved since we started making the rotations. You’re seeing more of the natives come back in, more wildlife is showing up."

Kent Vlieger

NRCS State Soil Health Specialist

"The first years that we were out here our infiltration rates were really not good. it would take fifteen to twenty minutes for that second infiltration rate to go in. And what we just did here a few minutes ago, that second inch went on in twenty-three seconds. that means there’s very little runoff. water is staying onsite. It’s going on into the ground. A lot of it’s being intercepted by our healthy soils that we’re building here."

Shad Larson

Rancher

"To introduce rotating into our operations, that was kind of an eye-opener for my father… I’d turn out the same time dad did, and my calves would always come home bigger because the weaning weights, as far as rotational grazing, is just phenomenal. dad and I partnered up with Ducks and Game, Fish, and Wildlife to do some fencing, and we’ve got 200 acres and 375 acres that are all cross-fenced, ready to roll. And that’s been a significant boost to our operation, as far as saving the grass."

Britton Blair

Rancher

"I just grew up rotating pastures and just learning how to read the grass, and a take half/leave half mentality. We try to rotate every two to six days, depending on pasture size and herd sizes. It’s important to get that rest and that rotation going… Those cows love to get to that fresh pasture and love that grass, and they get pretty used to rotating. "

Louie Bergner

Rancher

"When I first came home we had two pastures. there’s eight different paddocks now in the heifer pasture. The river pasture, I have that divided into four different sections. My plan with rotational grazing was hopefully that I would be able to survive a dry year by having the pastures in better shape so that I could make it through those dry years.  And I was able to make it through."

ESTACIONES DE RADIO:

KOTA 1380 AM  |  KZZI 95.9 FM  |  KGFX 1060 AM  |  KWAT 950 AM  |   KDLO 96.9 FM  |  WNAX 570 AM  |  KWYR 1260 a. m.

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*Fotos y audio cortesía de South Dakota Grasslands Coalition. // Distribución pagada por los Distritos de Conservación de Dakota del Sur. 

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