Native grass helps heal the land

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“I was born upon the prairie, where the wind blew free, and there was nothing to break the light of the sun. I was born where there were no enclosures, and where everything drew a free breath."
-Ten Bears, the great Comanche war chief

When I moved back to my family ranch in 2010 we had one of the wettest years on record. Our historic yearly average rainfall is around 18 to 22 inches, and that year it rained 45 inches. The pastures were so lush it was unbelievable. Then the drought of record in 2011-12 hit. The lush pastures became a distant memory as the livestock and wildlife consumed any vegetation that was holding on. Most of the so-called "improved" pastures looked like the Chihuahuan Desert. The Klein Grass and Bermuda, both brought from Africa by the Extension Agency were hardly visible. There was simply bare soil everywhere. These non-native species didn't know how to survive the drought we were experiencing. Which grasses survived and thrived once the rains returned? You guessed it, the native grasses? Primarily low-rainfall adapted natives such as Buffalo grass, Windmill grass and Sideoats grama.

Why are native grasses important?

1) Conservation - exotic/introduced species can push our natives and the wildlife that depends on them.
2) Natives require less rainfall and no fertilizer. They are deep rooted once established and have a symbiotic relationship with the microbes and fungi in the our soil.
3) It's a choice for future - interdependence of all life depends on a natural and balanced ecology. Natives are the basis for this which feeds us, cleans our air and cleans our water.

We have some old documents written in the mid 1800's by my family. These letters were written to family still living in Alsace, where our family had immigrated from in 1846. One of the letters more or less describes them establishing a homestead on a hill top surrounded by prairies and running streams. If you have visited our ranch there are no longer running streams (unless it rains 23 inches in one month as it did recently), and there are no prairies in our valley. Most of the ranch is brush country mixed with large, bull mesquite trees. The streams would still run, but the explosion in human population and heavy use of water for crop irrigation has all but depleted the shallow aquifers that once spring-fed seasonal creeks. The early pioneers grazed this country until there wasn't any grass left. Overgrazing gave the brush and trees the opportunity to encroach on land that was previously occupied by grass and forbs (prairie). In the world of grass, brush and trees there is a constant battle for sunlight. Whoever wins gets to grow in that spot. Some of you may argue that the prairie was maintained by fire, but recent anthropological research says otherwise. The Native Americans would use fire to burn the prairies to attract wildlife, such as the great herds of bison and antelope. It made hunting them for food significantly easier. There were certainly natural fires, but most likely they were infrequent. Evidence is pointing more and more towards the hooved ungulates for maintaining the once vast prairie ecosystem. Bison were almost hunted to extinction by the end of the 1800’s. Native Americans were also methodically killed or moved, and the prairie was settled by early pioneers such as my family. Little did they know what the consequences of their actions would be just a few hundred years later. I'm not trying to get political, just stating the facts. There is no arguing that fire can be a useful tool to maintain prairie ecosystems, but so can sound grazing management.

You may have figured out by now that the way we graze our cattle at Grazing Lands mimics nature. We move them almost every day, and sometimes multiple times per day. We “listen” to the pasture and "tells" us when it’s time to move. We try not to graze the plant more than 1/2. We give the pasture time to recover, often not returning for 120 to 180 days. This requires some basic infrastructure like electric fencing and pipes to supply water to the pastures. Pajarito Ranch, our flagship site, consists of 9 primary pastures, which can be subdivided into many more utilizing temporary electric fencing. Someone made the comment to me recently that "rotating cattle like that is a lot of work." Once the cattle learn the rhythm it's easy. It takes about 15 minutes to set up the next strand of temporary fence and maybe another 10 minutes to move the water trough and mineral feeder. When we call the cattle to move it only takes the herd, over 300 strong, to move through the gate. Yes it's a lot of work building and taking down miles of temporary electric fences day in and day out. It’s expensive installing water systems, but hopefully we only do it once in a lifetime. The return on investment is greater than you can imagine. I'm not just talking financial return, I'm talking about the biological return as well. In addition it's a pleasure to see the land and the cattle thriving.

As you may envision native grasses fit perfectly into the equation. Frates and Josie Seeligson have been planting native grasses at Pajarito Ranch for over a decade encompassing hundreds of acres of land. This year alone a project is slated to establish another 160 plus acres of native grasses. If your interested in what regenerative grazing and establishing native grasses can do for your land and your legacy please feel free to contact me directly by email: travis@grazinglands.com

,Travis Krause, CEO & Founder of Grazing Lands

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Five principles of soil health