What determines our stocking rate?

 We know that the main determinant of profitability for a ranch is the number of productive animals we can carry at a low cost per year.

And we know that the main constraint to a very high stocking rate is the Winter or dry season. The number of animals we can maintain in good body condition at a low cost in the Winter or dry season determines our stocking rate. Normally, in our green season we have forage excess!

By doing Total Grazing with adapted genetics, we can, and should have our cow's fat in the green season and in good condition in the Winter/dry season. The way to achieve this is to only graze the section or paddocks that our cows can keep up with in the green growing season and stockpiling the rest. Then we keep grazing the green season area until growth stops, and we finish off this area. Then we go to the stockpiled area and do Total grazing there!

By adapted genetics I mean cattle that have the resistance and adaptation to:

  • High heat index
  • Parasites and disease
  • ...
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Why Real Wealth Ranching?

Uncategorized Jun 08, 2021

When I started ranching, I learned right away that following conventional advice was not profitable and degraded the land. I had to find a better way or my dream of supporting my young family with what I loved the most would not be successful. After many years of learning and trial I started to see the light and now I have a profitable ranch that is improving in its production.


I soon realized it wasn’t enough to be successful in my ranch while the world around me is being degraded. We are, after all, in our own one and only planet. This is my main motivation to share this with you.

Why Real Wealth Ranching?
Defining what real wealth is requires us to consider 3 things necessary to enjoy life:
1.- Money, to buy and pay for things we need or want to have
2.- Time, to be able to enjoy the things that money can buy
3.- Health, to enjoy life and family and the things money bought

Without any of these 3 things, life can be difficult.


In ranching/farming- we need to achieve profitability a...

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What I wished I had done differently 30 years ago

Uncategorized Jun 01, 2021

Someone asked me the other day, what I wished I had done differently 30 years ago.

And it was so easy to answer!

As they say, experience comes from past poor decisions and good decisions come from experience. That means that we learn from our mistakes.

So learn from my mistakes but most importantly, learn from my successes because since then I've had many successes in improving soil, wildlife, plants biodiversity and the health of my cattle. 

One of the first things that I got right and implemented pretty quickly was an optimal calving season. This was key to increase my stocking rate and have a low maintenance calving season.

I prepared a free PDF with the 5 most important tips on achieving an optimal calving season and managing it. You can download it here.

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How to have healthy calves

Uncategorized May 25, 2021

Coronavirus/Rotavirus affects newborn calves and usually kills them or sets them back severely, it is usually identified by white scours and the calf appears listless, weak, thin, and does not respond to antibiotics, eventually the hair starts to drop off and feels like cardboard. It is frustrating to the cow as her calf stops taking milk and withers away.

When I first implemented an optimal calving season in the subtropics of Florida, we started having very young calves with scours, sometimes grey and sometimes white. At first, I could not identify the agent causing this but knew that it did not respond to antibiotics. Thanks to a good veterinarian that had experience with dairy cattle and after taking many samples to the laboratory he was able to identify the agent causing these deaths and it was coronavirus/rotavirus.  We proceeded to vaccinate with killed virus vaccine the pregnant cows before next calving season and the problem were solved. More and more this is becoming a prob...

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How to avoid cows stealing other cows’ calves

Uncategorized May 18, 2021

Have you ever had a cow, or first calf heifer steal some other cow calf and abandon their own?

I have had this situation every year before I learned a better way, it is a lot of hassle and stress to try to have the dam take its own calf back once it rejects it due to confusion after a long day’s work on calving season. Just recently one of my students had this happen with a first calf heifer and believe me, it is not enjoyable to graft the calf back to its own dam. This happens not because the animal is a bad mother but due to its own instinct and we need to learn why this happens to prevent it.

When we have concentrated calving occur in a short period as in an optimal calving season, we end up having multiple births per day, all those hormones and smells can confuse first calf heifers, first calf heifers having no previous calving experience are notorious to confuse their newborn calves and steal the calf of another cow, even experienced cows can be confused when they do not ident...

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What to do when calving in a drought?

Uncategorized May 11, 2021

This year I have observed a drier weather pattern in the growing season in many parts around the world, this is defined as drought. This may have impacted you in your environment or you may have heard of it.

It is particularly a problem when we have a drought during our calving season. Why is it an issue when calving in a drought? Well, as it may be obvious, we have a lack of forage.

What it ends up happening is that we start to rotate our calving cows trying to graze the small amount of forage in each paddock. And even if we move them slowly, which requires a lot of attention and care, we still can end up with calves left behind.

This is so common that having a percentage of calves lost or left behind is considered normal by many ranchers and farmers.

I can relate to that… Many years ago, when I did not know the best way to manage this situation, I left for the weekend and had someone else move the calving herd to a new paddock in their rotation. When I came back on Monday, I as...

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5 Quick Tips on Building Fences

total grazing May 04, 2021

Last week and this week I have been building fences... in the hot sun of Florida.

But I have done this gladly because fencing is so important to achieve Total Grazing in a ranch.

Fencing allows us to have the "predator effect" which is key to improve our land the fastest.

Today I am sharing with you 5 simple but very important tips you can use when building fences:

1. Whenever you start try to first design where your roads will go, and the roads will double as water alleys to your water points.


2. Go to through highest ridges, your cows and vehicles will spend less energy travelling around the ranch on the highest ridges.


3. Try to avoid steep slopes because that will create erosion on the road or water alley


4. Build a perimeter road so that you can travel around your ranch and put out fires and to check perimeter fences, that’s very important!

 

5. Then you go perpendicular to your water alleys or road and build a grid of permanent one-wire fences which will be no more ...

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How to reduce risks

total grazing Apr 26, 2021

I have stated: selective grazing leads to overgrazing when you have high to very high stocking rates.

I say this because by doing selective grazing we, by definition, leave a shorter rest to grazed paddocks and the herd returns sooner to re graze what was grazed.  Whenever rainfall diminishes the best species get re grazed before they have had the chance to fully replenish their energy reserves in crown/roots which means they are being over grazed.

Overgrazing occurs when an individual plant is re grazed before it has fully recovered from a previous grazing.  It has nothing to do with severity of grazing and it’s a function of time.  That is the reason why they advise to lower stocking rate when they get less rainfall.

With Total grazing we avoid overgrazing by taking more cow/days per grazing which allows for a much longer rest period.  Short rest periods in a short drought situation causes overgrazing.

Remember, stocking rate or the number of productive animals you can maintain...

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How to have happy plants

Uncategorized Apr 20, 2021

In my previous blog I talked about how the actual and most popular advice comes from an experiment done at University of Missouri by Crider in 1955 which concluded that it is better to take half and leave half of the forage when grazing. I also explained why that is totally incorrect when applied to the real world and especially when compared to what can be achieved, in terms of the ecosystem, under correct Total grazing.

Now I would like to explain what Happy plants means and its importance in increasing your ranch/farm stocking rate.

When plants are rested for a longer period, we find that microorganisms feeding on root exudates in turn feed the plant.  These microorganisms make soil nutrients available, and we also know that they can be ingested by the root of the plant, this is known as rhizophagy.  It becomes a closed cycle, additionally there is mellowing of the soil effect by the longer rest periods which makes the soil fluffy, this may also have to do with increased humus p...

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How to maximize regrowth

Uncategorized Apr 11, 2021

Regrowth after grazing relies on root and crown energy reserves, it is as nature functions and its why I want fat roots in my forages. The theory that says that regrowth depends on leaving enough photosynthetic material, or leaves, un grazed is not correct.


That theory comes from a study done by Crider in 1955 in Missouri by clipping at short intervals of less than 30 days on young annual grasses as a monoculture that hadn't had the opportunity to grow a full root system before the experiment started. No cattle were used, only scissors; what could be wrong with that? No regrowth enhancing saliva, no tugging of plants by cattle, no manure or urine, no hoof effect of high stock densities. In short, a very incorrect experiment which is the basis of the take half leave half actual recommendations by most grazing teachers and advisers.


In real life it doesn’t happen that way, especially under Total grazing where the saliva is close to the crown and as we know, the closer the saliva is t...

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