|
Hope for the Best, But Plan for the Worst –
Drought Management
 |
 |
 |
A combination of carefully
managed rotations, soil-building and irrigation pipes helps
Colorado rancher Mark Frasier survive periodic droughts. –
Range photo by Jill Auburn |
 |
Recent rounds of severe drought across western rangelands have
brought home the critical need for management strategies during
times without rain.
For many, the knee-jerk drought strategy becomes a desperate attempt
to keep the number of livestock stable no matter the lack of feed.
After all, a banker needs to document a borrower’s number
of sheep, goats or cattle, not how much flesh the livestock carry.
This crisis mentality often leads to degraded rangelands, lower
birth rates, fewer pounds to sell and financial stress.
Instead, a more sustainable drought plan includes a two-pronged
approach: protect the soil while maintaining a modest income over
the long run.
A land manager can not protect the soil in one year. It takes ongoing
effort to build organic matter in the soil and vigorous plants that
can withstand the tortures of drought – including the drying
winds and scorching temperatures that show up when the rain doesn’t.
Mark Frasier runs 400 cows and 3,400 yearlings on his 29,000-acre
Woodrow, Colo., ranch. He rotates his cattle through 190 pastures,
spreading nutrients, trampling old stubble and guaranteeing rest
to keep the grasses healthy.
“The cattle recycle nutrients and organic matter back into
the soil, which helps the ground retain moisture,” says Frasier,
who serves on Western Region SARE’s grant-making council.
“We can’t say when we are going to get rain, but we
can prepare ourselves so that our soil is receptive and the plants
are healthy enough to respond when we do.”
The key to distributing livestock and providing enough rest –
plants need more rest during dry periods – is reliable drinking
water. Pipelines, wells and spring developments cost a hefty investment
at first, but the payback comes in stronger – and more –
grass.
With his investment in pipelines and a one- to three-day rotation
system, second-generation rancher Frasier now runs more cattle on
better grass. During Colorado’s worst drought in 250 years,
Frasier had to de-stock his ranch only one year.
“We’re seeing a healthier landscape and we are just
starting to increase the number of cattle we graze,” he says.
“Grazing more cattle on the same resource is going to have
an economic advantage.” Frasier, a devotee of Holistic ManagementTM,
says his improvements have lowered his cost of gain from 35 cents
a pound to about 11 cents.
 |
 |
 |
Colorado rancher Mark Frasier
– Portrait by Ron Daines |
 |
Planting pastures with drought-tolerant, introduced species will
protect native range during a drought, too. So will moving livestock
to rented pasture while the range needs rest. Moving livestock to
grass is almost always less expensive than moving grass to the livestock.
Frasier also maximizes the second prong of sustainable drought
management: optimize long-term income without sacrificing the range.
Consider selling calves, lambs or kids, but by selling lighter weight
offspring early, culling the base herd more severely or selling
the base herd before a severe drought drops prices and then renting
out pasture. Tax incentives can help producers buy a herd back after
the drought ends.
While the best-laid plans sometimes go awry, the best drought strategy
is to plan today for tomorrow’s dry weather. The operative
phrase on western rangelands is not if a drought comes, but when
it comes.
Next Section
Top
|