blue5000 wrote: » Floki why is it better not to turn the pile? Only thing I can think of is temperatures maybe going too high.
gr8 m8 wrote: » Anyone have any further insight for me?
kowtow wrote: » I have a feeling it's because anaerobic decomposition preserves more nitrogen. They say the best dung is kept in the shed, deep bedded and trodden by heavy cattle right through the winter, never removed, but left to mature and put out just before the next winter. That way all the oxygen is removed like a silage clamp and you get a fully anaerobic decomposition. Floki will know better!
Upstream wrote: » Joel Salatin Also, there's a guy from Sligo who's doing something similar. You can look up the Rare Ruminaire on Google and Facebook. He has an organic suckler herd and is using quite a few of the practices you mention. Worth a look. I'm hoping to try some mob grazing next year as well, so hope it goes well for you. Upstream
Floki wrote: » Mob grazing or as us Wexford farmers call it paddock grazing. We're slowly infiltrating the organic movement.:D
yosemitesam1 wrote: » Mob grazing is a lot more complicated than normal rotational grazing if done right. Looking to balance grazing quality in the short term versus maintaining a diverse productive sward which needs varied management to keep all species in a balance.
Floki wrote: » Anaerobic bacteria are supposed to be the bad guys in soil and in compost making. There was someone from ucd I think made up a batch of compost tea and he was wondering why his vegetables weren't doing as well as everyone else's vegetables with their compost tea. They looked at his compost and tea under the microscope and it was full of anaerobic bacteria. So they just had to get rid of his pile and start again. You'd know anaerobic bacteria and conditions by the bad and strong smell. It smells bad to humans anyway. Good compost and tea should barely have a smell or none. I'm not sure how that works out with that biodynamic business with the cow dung in the cow horn and buried in the soil business. But it must still be aerobic bacteria from the horn because they tried a vegan alternative of a plastic horn and the stuff that came out was supposed to stinking stuff (must have been completely anaerobic) and it was useless.
kowtow wrote: » Is there any chance that the anaerobic approach maximises the nitrogen while the aerobic approach improves the soil structure? Must go back to salatin et. al.
gr8 m8 wrote: » Hello. I've been on this before talking about taking horse bedding from a local stud, I can have as much as I want but the percentage of droppings in it is minimal. Usually I just bed the yearlings with it for the winter which saves me on buying straw myself and normally get by with a trailer of bales for calving cows and rearing calves. I am a huge advocate for spreading rotted dung on the land in the autumn and believe there are huge benefits to doing so! This might sound bit out there but I was wondering (now bear with me and humour me if at all possible ) if I was to mix my slurry through this free straw at equal parts by weight, so say a ton of slurry to a ton of straw inside a trailer or dung spreader and leave it on a concrete pad to decompose and turned it semi regularly, would I have good dung in large quantities to fertilise my grass paddocks? Or would I be better off just spreading the slurry straight out of the tank? Thank you for your time.
Waffletraktor wrote: » Is there not something to do with ph? Contractor here say the ad plant has to acidify digestate lagoons to preserve N.
Floki wrote: » I know you're all about the different plant species in grassland. But really mob grazing is essentially get the animals on, get it grazed fast and get them off to allow the pasture to recover and give all the soil fauna a chance to do their thing. It was discovered on the plains of Africa by observing the roaming herds of herbivores and how well the vegetation grew from this graze and leave, graze and leave. It is a bit hilarious though that this was also observed and then put into practice in the paddock system and 21 day rotation in New Zealand. Same system different environment but still it all comes down to how our humble grass plant evolved and grows.
yosemitesam1 wrote: » If you want to maximize grass grown without throwing out a lot of fert you can't follow the same grazing management. If you keep hitting grass as soon as it gets to 3 leaves you'll end up just selecting for bent grass and other very unproductive grasses. They will grow because they put less energy into growing leaf compared to that of scavenging nutrients. So every round (without large amounts of fert being spread) bent grass will take less of a hit on the nutrients it has accumulated compared to a more productive grass. If you want to stop this happening you need to vary management to favour productivity. Allowing the chance for herbs and legumes to set seed also can't be done under the 21 day rotation and its not cost effective to keep buying seed.
Floki wrote: » I can guarantee you there's no other way you can maximize the amount of grass grown without the rotation system (fert or not). We can call it mob grazing if we want but to mob graze a lot of people will have to split into paddocks as either the mob is too small or the field is too big. On the bent grass. There's plenty of lawns that have ryegrass growing with no fert and just an application of lime occasionally. What sort of rotation length would you need for legumes in grass? Bear in mind clover is a legume.
yosemitesam1 wrote: » I was taking mob grazing to mean the holistic style approach which is what is generally meant when used in the UK. Do you think that ryegrass in lawn seed would perform more like bent grass in the field or it would be similar to agricultural strains? The point with this whole holistic approach is that there's no one size fits all approach or guidelines to follow. Red clover, sainfoin, birdsfoot trefoil all benefit from longer rotations than white clover and they as well as alsike clover require extra time to set seed occasionally if they're to persist. Herbs are the same.
gr8 m8 wrote: » Hello. Is anyone here growing or know someone growing a crop of sainfoin? I'd like to hear their thoughts on it