#184 Five Grazing Adjustments to Make Before the New Year for a More Profitable 2026 |

Uncategorized Dec 30, 2025

(Versión en Español a continuación)

5 Grazing Adjustments to Make Before the New Year for a More Profitable 2026

 Welcome to your fat wallets podcast. I am your host, Jim Elizondo of Real Wealth Ranching, where we help you maximize your profits while improving your land the fastest.

This time of year always creates a strange mix of emotions for ranchers.

There’s relief that another season is behind us.
There’s fatigue from everything that didn’t go according to plan.
And there’s that quiet pressure to “do better next year” — even if we’re not quite sure what that means yet.

Most people use this week to reflect on their goals.
I’d rather you think about adjustments.

Big changes don’t usually stick.
Small, well-chosen adjustments do.

So instead of resolutions, here are five grazing adjustments you can make before the New Year that will quietly — but powerfully — change your land, your cattle, and your bottom line in 2026.

These aren’t trendy ideas.
They’re the kinds of decisions that reduce stress instead of adding more rules to your plate.

1. Choose a Recovery Period You Can Actually Honor

This may be the most important adjustment of all.

Every grazing plan looks good on paper — until weather, labor, or life gets involved. And when things fall apart, the first casualty is almost always recovery.

Here’s the hard truth most people don’t want to admit:

If your recovery period only works when everything goes perfectly, it isn’t a recovery period — it’s a wish.

Before the New Year, ask yourself one simple question:

What recovery period can I realistically protect next season, even when things go wrong?

Not the one you want.
The one you can defend.

That might be:

  • 30 days instead of 45
  • 45 days instead of 60
  • Or even longer, if you’ve been overgrazing without realizing it

Recovery is not a number you choose once and forget. It’s a biological response to how plants were grazed last time and the growing conditions.

If grazing was selective, your livestock advanced faster through your property, shortening your recovery.
If grazing was uniform and complete, recovery could be longer, if necessary.

But here’s the key: plants don’t recover on intention — their recovery depends on growing conditions and previous grazing style.

For 2026, don’t plan for the best-case scenario.
Plan for the messy one.

That single adjustment will protect more grass, more roots, and more soil carbon than any fancy grazing chart ever will.

2. Stop Trying to Optimize Every Paddock

This one is uncomfortable — especially for good managers.

Most grazing failures happen because we ask every acre to do everything at the same time:

  • Feed animals high quality forage
  • Regrow quickly
  • Build soil
  • Look good
  • Be resilient

Nature never does this.

Nature separates functions in time and space.

If you want a more profitable 2026, stop trying to make every paddock perfect and start deciding what each paddock’s job is.

Some land should:

  • Feed animals during the green season

Some land should:

  • Act as a buffer when recovery isn’t ready

Some land should:

  • Be left alone long enough to actually build long-lived soil carbon

When you stop forcing one paddock to do everything, pressure disappears from the entire system.

You make better decisions.
You stop grazing out of panic.
And suddenly, grazing becomes easier rather than harder.

Before the New Year, decide:

  • Which land feeds animals early
  • Which land protects recovery
  • Which land you iintentionally allow to mature next season

This isn’t neglect.
It’s biological honesty.

3. Adjust Infrastructure to Save Time — Not Impress Anyone

Most ranchers don’t need more infrastructure.

They need simpler and more flexible infrastructure.

Before 2026, take a hard look at where your time actually goes:

  • Long walks to check the water
  • Opening and closing gates
  • Fixing temporary solutions that became permanent
  • Moving animals more often than biology requires

Ask yourself:
What is costing me time every single week that could be simplified?

Often, the most profitable infrastructure changes are boring:

  • One additional water point
  • One fence moved 100 feet.
  • One gate removed instead of added.
  • One paddock made larger.

Infrastructure should serve biology — not your ego.

If your setup forces you to:

  • Move animals faster than plants recover
  • Skip moves because you’re tired.
  • Or graze paddocks “just a little” because it’s convenient.

Then the infrastructure is controlling you — not the other way around.

The best infrastructure adjustment for 2026 is the one that:

  • Reduces decision fatigue
  • Makes the right decision the easy decision
  • Protects recovery without constant micromanagement

4. Stop Doing the Things That Quietly Prevent Improvement

This one requires honesty.

There are things many of us do because:

  • We’ve always done them
  • They feel safe
  • They look responsible
  • Or someone once told us they were “best practice.”

But some of those habits quietly block progress.

Here are a few to reconsider before the New Year:

Stop grazing “just a little more.”

That one extra day, that half-day, that “they’re not hurting anything” moment — that’s where overgrazing actually happens.

Overgrazing is not about severity.
It’s about timing. It's about re-grazing before the individual plant has recovered adequately 

Stop chasing green regrowth.

Green looks good.
Green feels productive.
But constantly grazing regrowth keeps plants metabolically young and soil carbon short-lived.

Chasing green may cause scours, and livestock scours are neither healthy nor feel-good.

Brown grass during stockpiling is not a failure.
Brown grass is often work completed.

Stop using supplements to compensate for grazing mistakes

Supplements should support biology — not replace it.

If animals need constant supplementation to maintain condition in the green season, the grazing system is a failure.

Fix recovery first.
Then supplement strategically — not emotionally.

Stop measuring success only by short-term performance

Fast gains often come at the expense of long-term capacity.

The most profitable systems are not the flashiest ones.
They’re the ones that get easier every year. The ones that improve your soil fertility year over year.

5. Make One Decision That Favors the Soil — Even If It’s Uncomfortable

If you only make one adjustment before the New Year, make this one.

Decide that in 2026, you will let some paddocks fully mature on purpose.

Not accidentally.
Not when things fall apart.
Intentionally.

That might mean:

  • Stockpiling a section for the entire growing season
  • Letting forage go to seed
  • Watching it turn brown
  • Ignoring the urge to “clean it up.”

This is where long-lived soil carbon is built.

When plants complete their energy storage cycle:

  • Roots fill
  • Exudates change
  • Microbes accumulate biomass
  • Fungal pathways dominate
  • Soil structure improves

You cannot rush this.
You cannot fake it.
And you cannot build it while constantly interrupting plant maturity.

The irony is that this one uncomfortable decision often leads to:

  • Higher carrying capacity
  • Lower feed costs
  • More drought resilience
  • Less management stress

Not immediately — but reliably.

A Final Thought Before the New Year

You don’t need a perfect grazing plan for 2026.

You need a plan that:

  • Protects recovery
  • Reduces panic decisions
  • Aligns with plant biology
  • And gives soil time to do its work.

Profit doesn’t come from doing more.
It comes from contradicting nature less.

If you make these five adjustments — even imperfectly — you’ll notice something shift:

  • The land becomes more forgiving
  • The cattle become easier to manage.
  • And the system starts working with you instead of against you.

That’s the kind of progress worth carrying into a new year.

If you want help implementing these ideas step by step — without overwhelm — that’s exactly what we work through inside the Total Grazing Academy and the Fat Wallets membership.

But whether you join us or not, start here:
Protect recovery.
Let the grass finish its work.
And stop asking your land to do contradictory things.

May God bless you and your family, and may this new 2026 be the best ever!


(Versión en Español a continuación)

5 Grazing Adjustments to Make Before the New Year for a More Profitable 2026

 Welcome to your fat wallets podcast. I am your host, Jim Elizondo of Real Wealth Ranching, where we help you maximize your profits while improving your land the fastest.

This time of year always creates a strange mix of emotions for ranchers.

There’s relief that another season is behind us.
There’s fatigue from everything that didn’t go according to plan.
And there’s that quiet pressure to “do better next year” — even if we’re not quite sure what that means yet.

Most people use this week to reflect on their goals.
I’d rather you think about adjustments.

Big changes don’t usually stick.
Small, well-chosen adjustments do.

So instead of resolutions, here are five grazing adjustments you can make before the New Year that will quietly — but powerfully — change your land, your cattle, and your bottom line in 2026.

These aren’t trendy ideas.
They’re the kinds of decisions that reduce stress instead of adding more rules to your plate.

1. Choose a Recovery Period You Can Actually Honor

This may be the most important adjustment of all.

Every grazing plan looks good on paper — until weather, labor, or life gets involved. And when things fall apart, the first casualty is almost always recovery.

Here’s the hard truth most people don’t want to admit:

If your recovery period only works when everything goes perfectly, it isn’t a recovery period — it’s a wish.

Before the New Year, ask yourself one simple question:

What recovery period can I realistically protect next season, even when things go wrong?

Not the one you want.
The one you can defend.

That might be:

  • 30 days instead of 45
  • 45 days instead of 60
  • Or even longer, if you’ve been overgrazing without realizing it

Recovery is not a number you choose once and forget. It’s a biological response to how plants were grazed last time and the growing conditions.

If grazing was selective, your livestock advanced faster through your property, shortening your recovery.
If grazing was uniform and complete, recovery could be longer, if necessary.

But here’s the key: plants don’t recover on intention — their recovery depends on growing conditions and previous grazing style.

For 2026, don’t plan for the best-case scenario.
Plan for the messy one.

That single adjustment will protect more grass, more roots, and more soil carbon than any fancy grazing chart ever will.

2. Stop Trying to Optimize Every Paddock

This one is uncomfortable — especially for good managers.

Most grazing failures happen because we ask every acre to do everything at the same time:

  • Feed animals high quality forage
  • Regrow quickly
  • Build soil
  • Look good
  • Be resilient

Nature never does this.

Nature separates functions in time and space.

If you want a more profitable 2026, stop trying to make every paddock perfect and start deciding what each paddock’s job is.

Some land should:

  • Feed animals during the green season

Some land should:

  • Act as a buffer when recovery isn’t ready

Some land should:

  • Be left alone long enough to actually build long-lived soil carbon

When you stop forcing one paddock to do everything, pressure disappears from the entire system.

You make better decisions.
You stop grazing out of panic.
And suddenly, grazing becomes easier rather than harder.

Before the New Year, decide:

  • Which land feeds animals early
  • Which land protects recovery
  • Which land you iintentionally allow to mature next season

This isn’t neglect.
It’s biological honesty.

3. Adjust Infrastructure to Save Time — Not Impress Anyone

Most ranchers don’t need more infrastructure.

They need simpler and more flexible infrastructure.

Before 2026, take a hard look at where your time actually goes:

  • Long walks to check the water
  • Opening and closing gates
  • Fixing temporary solutions that became permanent
  • Moving animals more often than biology requires

Ask yourself:
What is costing me time every single week that could be simplified?

Often, the most profitable infrastructure changes are boring:

  • One additional water point
  • One fence moved 100 feet.
  • One gate removed instead of added.
  • One paddock made larger.

Infrastructure should serve biology — not your ego.

If your setup forces you to:

  • Move animals faster than plants recover
  • Skip moves because you’re tired.
  • Or graze paddocks “just a little” because it’s convenient.

Then the infrastructure is controlling you — not the other way around.

The best infrastructure adjustment for 2026 is the one that:

  • Reduces decision fatigue
  • Makes the right decision the easy decision
  • Protects recovery without constant micromanagement

4. Stop Doing the Things That Quietly Prevent Improvement

This one requires honesty.

There are things many of us do because:

  • We’ve always done them
  • They feel safe
  • They look responsible
  • Or someone once told us they were “best practice.”

But some of those habits quietly block progress.

Here are a few to reconsider before the New Year:

Stop grazing “just a little more.”

That one extra day, that half-day, that “they’re not hurting anything” moment — that’s where overgrazing actually happens.

Overgrazing is not about severity.
It’s about timing. It's about re-grazing before the individual plant has recovered adequately 

Stop chasing green regrowth.

Green looks good.
Green feels productive.
But constantly grazing regrowth keeps plants metabolically young and soil carbon short-lived.

Chasing green may cause scours, and livestock scours are neither healthy nor feel-good.

Brown grass during stockpiling is not a failure.
Brown grass is often work completed.

Stop using supplements to compensate for grazing mistakes

Supplements should support biology — not replace it.

If animals need constant supplementation to maintain condition in the green season, the grazing system is a failure.

Fix recovery first.
Then supplement strategically — not emotionally.

Stop measuring success only by short-term performance

Fast gains often come at the expense of long-term capacity.

The most profitable systems are not the flashiest ones.
They’re the ones that get easier every year. The ones that improve your soil fertility year over year.

5. Make One Decision That Favors the Soil — Even If It’s Uncomfortable

If you only make one adjustment before the New Year, make this one.

Decide that in 2026, you will let some paddocks fully mature on purpose.

Not accidentally.
Not when things fall apart.
Intentionally.

That might mean:

  • Stockpiling a section for the entire growing season
  • Letting forage go to seed
  • Watching it turn brown
  • Ignoring the urge to “clean it up.”

This is where long-lived soil carbon is built.

When plants complete their energy storage cycle:

  • Roots fill
  • Exudates change
  • Microbes accumulate biomass
  • Fungal pathways dominate
  • Soil structure improves

You cannot rush this.
You cannot fake it.
And you cannot build it while constantly interrupting plant maturity.

The irony is that this one uncomfortable decision often leads to:

  • Higher carrying capacity
  • Lower feed costs
  • More drought resilience
  • Less management stress

Not immediately — but reliably.

A Final Thought Before the New Year

You don’t need a perfect grazing plan for 2026.

You need a plan that:

  • Protects recovery
  • Reduces panic decisions
  • Aligns with plant biology
  • And gives soil time to do its work.

Profit doesn’t come from doing more.
It comes from contradicting nature less.

If you make these five adjustments — even imperfectly — you’ll notice something shift:

  • The land becomes more forgiving
  • The cattle become easier to manage.
  • And the system starts working with you instead of against you.

That’s the kind of progress worth carrying into a new year.

If you want help implementing these ideas step by step — without overwhelm — that’s exactly what we work through inside the Total Grazing Academy and the Fat Wallets membership.

But whether you join us or not, start here:
Protect recovery.
Let the grass finish its work.
And stop asking your land to do contradictory things.

May God bless you and your family, and may this new 2026 be the best ever!


(Versión en Español a continuación)

5 Ajustes de Pastoreo para un 2026 Más Rentable antes del Año Nuevo

Bienvenidos a su podcast para el ahorro. Soy su presentador, Jim Elizondo de Real Wealth Ranching, donde les ayudamos a maximizar sus ganancias y a mejorar sus tierras al máximo.

Esta época del año siempre genera una extraña mezcla de emociones en los ganaderos.
Hay alivio al dejar atrás otra temporada.
Hay cansancio por todo lo que no salió según lo planeado.
Y existe esa silenciosa presión de "mejorar el año que viene", aunque aún no estemos muy seguros de qué significa eso.
La mayoría de la gente usa esta semana para reflexionar sobre sus objetivos.
Prefiero que piensen en ajustes.
Los grandes cambios no suelen perdurar.
Los pequeños ajustes bien elegidos sí. Así que, en lugar de propósitos, aquí tienes cinco ajustes en el pastoreo que puedes hacer antes de Año Nuevo y que, de forma silenciosa pero contundente, cambiarán tu tierra, tu ganado y tus ganancias en 2026.

Estas no son ideas de moda.
Son el tipo de decisiones que reducen el estrés en lugar de añadir más reglas.

1. Elige un periodo de recuperación que realmente puedas respetar

Este puede ser el ajuste más importante de todos.
Todo plan de pastoreo parece bueno en teoría, hasta que el clima, el trabajo o la vida cotidiana intervienen. Y cuando todo se desmorona, la primera víctima casi siempre es la recuperación.
Esta es la dura realidad que la mayoría de la gente no quiere admitir:
Si tu periodo de recuperación solo funciona cuando todo va a la perfección, no es un periodo de recuperación, es un deseo.
Antes de Año Nuevo, hazte una simple pregunta:

¿Qué periodo de recuperación puedo proteger de forma realista la próxima temporada, incluso cuando las cosas salgan mal?

No el que quieres.
El que puedes defender. Eso podría ser:

  • 30 días en lugar de 45
  • 45 días en lugar de 60
  • O incluso más, si ha estado sobrepastoreando sin darse cuenta. 

La recuperación no es un número que se elige una vez y se olvida. Es una respuesta biológica a cómo se pastorearon las plantas la última vez y a las condiciones de crecimiento.

Si el pastoreo fue selectivo, su ganado avanzó más rápido por su propiedad, acortando la recuperación.
Si el pastoreo fue uniforme y completo, la recuperación podría ser más larga, si fuera necesario.

Pero aquí está la clave: las plantas no se recuperan intencionalmente; su recuperación depende de las condiciones de crecimiento y del estilo de pastoreo previo.

Para 2026, no planifique para el mejor escenario posible.
Planifique para el escenario complicado.
Ese único ajuste protegerá más pasto, más raíces y más carbono del suelo que cualquier tabla de pastoreo sofisticada.

2. Deje de intentar optimizar cada potrero

Este es un punto incómodo, especialmente para los buenos administradores. La mayoría de los fracasos del pastoreo ocurren porque exigimos que cada acre haga todo al mismo tiempo:

  • Alimentar a los animales con forraje de alta calidad
  • Regenerar rápidamente

  • Fortalecer el suelo

  • Verse bien

  • Ser resiliente

La naturaleza nunca hace esto.

La naturaleza separa las funciones en el tiempo y el espacio.

Si quieres un 2026 más rentable, deja de intentar que cada potrero sea perfecto y empieza a decidir cuál es la función de cada uno.

Algunas tierras deberían:

  • Alimentar a los animales durante la temporada verde.

Algunas tierras deberían:

  • Actuar como amortiguador cuando la recuperación no esté lista.

Algunas tierras deberían:

  • Dejarse en paz el tiempo suficiente para que realmente generen carbono en el suelo de larga duración.

Cuando dejas de obligar a un potrero a hacerlo todo, la presión desaparece de todo el sistema.
Tomas mejores decisiones.
Dejas de pastorear por pánico.

Y de repente, pastorear se vuelve más fácil en lugar de difícil.
Antes de Año Nuevo, decide:

  • Qué tierras alimentan a los animales antes.

  • Qué tierras protegen la recuperación.

  • Qué tierras permites que maduren intencionalmente la próxima temporada.

Esto no es negligencia.
Es honestidad biológica.

3. Ajusta la infraestructura para ahorrar tiempo, no para impresionar a nadie.

La mayoría de los ganaderos no necesitan más infraestructura. Necesitan una infraestructura más sencilla y flexible.
Antes de 2026, analiza detenidamente adónde dedicas tu tiempo:

  • Largas caminatas para revisar el agua

  • Abrir y cerrar portones

  • Reparar soluciones temporales que se convirtieron en permanentes

  • Mover animales con más frecuencia de la que requiere la biología

Ask yourself:
¿Qué me cuesta tiempo cada semana que podría simplificarse?

A menudo, los cambios de infraestructura más rentables son aburridos:

  • Un punto de agua adicional

  • Una valla movida 30 metros.

  • Una puerta quitada en lugar de añadida.

  • Un potrero más grande.

La infraestructura debe estar al servicio de la biología, no de tu ego.

Si tu configuración te obliga a:

  • Mover animales más rápido de lo que las plantas se recuperan

  • Omitir mudanzas por cansancio

  • O pastorear los potreros "solo un poco" porque te conviene.

Entonces, la infraestructura te controla a ti, no al revés. El mejor ajuste de infraestructura para 2026 es el que:

  • Reduce la fatiga de decisión

  • Hace que la decisión correcta sea fácil

  • Protege la recuperación sin una microgestión constante

4. Deja de hacer las cosas que silenciosamente impiden la mejora

Esto requiere honestidad.

Hay cosas que muchos hacemos porque:

  • Siempre las hemos hecho

  • Nos dan seguridad

  • Parece que somos responsables

  • O alguien nos dijo alguna vez que eran las "mejores prácticas".

Pero algunos de esos hábitos bloquean silenciosamente el progreso.
Aquí tienes algunos para reconsiderar antes del Año Nuevo:

Deja de pastorear "solo un poco mas".

Ese día extra, ese medio día, ese momento de "no hacen daño a nada": ahí es donde realmente ocurre el sobrepastoreo.

El sobrepastoreo no se trata de severidad.

Se trata de tiempo. Se trata de volver a pastorear antes de que la planta se haya recuperado adecuadamente.

Deja de buscar el rebrote verde.

El verde se ve bien.
El verde se siente productivo.

Pero el pastoreo constante para el rebrote mantiene a las plantas metabólicamente jóvenes y el carbono del suelo efímero.

Buscar el rebrote verde puede causar diarrea, y la diarrea en el ganado no es saludable ni reconfortante.
Buscar el rebrote verde puede causar diarrea, y la diarrea en el ganado no es saludable ni reconfortante.
El pasto marrón suele ser trabajo terminado.

Deja de usar suplementos para compensar errores de pastoreo.

Los suplementos deben apoyar la biología, no reemplazarla.
Si los animales necesitan suplementación constante para mantener su condición en la temporada verde, el sistema de pastoreo es un fracaso.
Primero soluciona la recuperación.
Luego, suplementa estratégicamente, no emocionalmente.

Deje de medir el éxito solo por el rendimiento a corto plazo.
Las ganancias rápidas a menudo se producen a expensas de la capacidad a largo plazo.
Los sistemas más rentables no son los más llamativos.
Son los que se vuelven más fáciles cada año. Los que mejoran la fertilidad del suelo año tras año.

5. Tome una decisión que favorezca el suelo, incluso si es incómoda.

Si solo hace un ajuste antes del Año Nuevo, haga este.

Decida que en 2026 dejará que algunos potreros maduren completamente a propósito.

No accidentalmente.
No cuando las cosas se desmoronen.
Intencionalmente.

Eso podría significar:

  • Acumular una sección para toda la temporada de crecimiento.

  • Dejar que el forraje produzca semillas.

  • Ver cómo se vuelve marrón.Ignorar la necesidad de "limpiarlo".

  •  

    Ignorar la necesidad de "limpiarlo".

Aquí es donde se construye el carbono del suelo de larga duración.

Cuando las plantas completan su ciclo de almacenamiento de energía:

  • Las raíces se llenan

  • Los exudados cambian

  • Los microbios acumulan biomasa

  • Las vías fúngicas dominan

  • La estructura del suelo mejora

No se puede apresurar.
No se puede fingir.
Y no se puede construir mientras se interrumpe constantemente la maduración de las plantas.

Lo irónico es que esta incómoda decisión a menudo conduce a:

  • Mayor capacidad de carga

  • Menores costos de alimentación

  • Mayor resiliencia a la sequía

  • Menor estrés de manejo

No de inmediato, pero sí de forma fiable.

Una reflexión final antes del Año Nuevo

No necesitas un plan de pastoreo perfecto para 2026.

Necesitas un plan que:

  • Proteja la recuperación

  • Reduzca las decisiones de pánico

  • Se alinee con la biología vegetal

  • Y le dé tiempo al suelo para hacer su trabajo.

La ganancia no proviene de hacer más.
Proviene de contradecir menos a la naturaleza.

Si haces estos cinco ajustes, incluso de forma imperfecta, notarás que algo cambia:

  • La tierra se vuelve más tolerante

  •  

    El ganado se vuelve más fácil de manejar.

  • Y el sistema empieza a trabajar contigo en lugar de en tu contra.

Ese es el tipo de progreso que vale la pena llevar adelante en el nuevo año.

Si necesitas ayuda para implementar estas ideas paso a paso, sin agobiarte, eso es exactamente lo que trabajamos en la Academia de Pastoreo Total y la membresía de Club de Ganaderos Exitosos

Pero, te unas o no, empieza por aquí:
Protege la recuperación.
Deja que el pasto termine su trabajo.
Y deja de pedirle a tu tierra que haga cosas contradictorias.

Que Dios te bendiga a ti y a tu familia, ¡y que este 2026 sea el mejor de todos!

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