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When cattle grazing is well managed, weeds can be our friends. They may build soil and improve animal health.

R. P. 'Doc' Cooke, Blogger

December 10, 2019

3 Min Read
Pasture weeds
Weeds can be well eaten by cattle, and beneficial to soil and livestock.Alan Newport

I was not quite in a “dead sweat” one day in early July but my shirt was wet with perspiration when the cell phone rang. I was tickled when an old friend showed up on the line rather than someone with a foreign accent wanting to sell me health insurance. I was ready to halt my workout on ash samplings in some wet ground.

After niceties and several lies about each other my friend wanted me to answer a question. This tends to make me nervous since he is much more intelligent and successful than yours truly.

Seems he had received an email and some pictures of a pasture that had been recently grazed at a stock density of 250,000 pounds per acre. There was an area of bare ground and speculation over the cause since many of the common causes (cattle loafing or camping, bale grazing, herbicide spill) seem to have been eliminated. Another consultant noted that the pasture had been overgrazed. His question to me was about overgrazing.

I’m not sure what overgrazing is as it pertains to a pasture. I’ve seen millions of acres that were almost nothing but weeds and dirt and rock. But truth is cattle will certainly overgraze individual plants if given enough time for a little regrowth to occur. Individual plants and whole pasture are not the same deal. Overgrazing is a time issue, not an animal density issue. More about this on a later blog.

I have reviewed work by Utah animal behaviorist Fred Provenza and his students on the relationship of animals (mostly ruminants) and plants. I have done some of the same. The truth is that all plants have defense mechanisms to ward off their demise by cattle and other pests. They utilize a nearly endless number of systems and compounds (often chemicals) to ensure their survival. All plants are toxic at some level. Many become more toxic and dangerous after application with soluble salt fertilizer. An example is nitrates in many sorghum species and grain crops.

The thing Provenza has documented and we should have learned over the past couple of decades that cattle learn to use inherent feedback systems to mix and match foraging. Factors involved in their learning and application in the pasture include but are not limited to:

  • Epigenetics received in utero

  • Information received by observation of herd mates

  • Brix levels of the plants

  • Availability and diversity of plant species

  • Location

  • Grazing density of the herd

Weeds are most commonly defined as plants that are out of place or in too in high numbers. Some managers would disagree and define a weed as anything they do not like. Further, I’ve heard “experts” say weeds were robbing the fertility from the “good” plants.

Folks, this is not very accurate. Truth is that weeds often condition the soil, and tap rooted weeds correct a broken water, mineral and biological cycle and often result in increased soil energy. These cycles have huge positive effects on future animal health. Many plant compounds that are toxic at high levels are medicinal in smaller amounts. There is a near-exhaustive list of forbs, bushes, briars and trees that are anti-parasitical.

Remember that with natural model learning we have found that everything relates to everything. This “systems approach” can allow for increases and stabilization of our land. This includes animal health. In our area broad-leafed forbs are very important for stability, health and soil development.

We need to be real careful about declaring war on anything just because we don’t like the looks. A shovel used in the soil on a regular bases helps point us in the right direction. Diversity yields system stability and animal health.

About the Author(s)

R. P. 'Doc' Cooke

Blogger

R. P. "Doc" Cooke, DVM, is a mostly retired veterinarian from Sparta, Tennessee. Doc has been in the cattle business since the late 1970s and figures he's driven 800,000 miles, mostly at night, while practicing food animal medicine and surgery in five counties in the Upper Cumberland area of middle Tennessee. He says all those miles schooled him well in "man-made mistakes" and that his age and experiences have allowed him to be mentored by the area’s most fruitful and unfruitful "old timers." Doc believes these relationships provided him unfair advantages in thought and the opportunity to steal others’ ideas and tweak them to fit his operations. Today most of his veterinary work is telephone consultation with graziers in five or six states. He also writes and hosts ranching schools. He is a big believer in having fun while ranching but is serious about business and other producers’ questions. Doc’s operation, 499 Cattle Company, now has an annual stocking rate of about 500 pounds beef per acre of pasture and he grazes 12 months each year with no hay or farm equipment and less than two pounds of daily supplement. You can reach him by cell phone at (931) 256-0928 or at [email protected].

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