Grazing Management
2019 Green Pastures Farm May Grazing school topic: Ground Litter Is Paramount to Healthy Pastures
Building healthy soils with livestock grazing management
Building healthy soils with livestock grazing management
We believe that you have to think and do things differently than the status quo. We believe that you can make a good living on the land using livestock and regenerative grazing practices. Want to learn more, check out our May grazing school.
Cattle do quite well feeding themselves even in the winter. There is no other process that lowers your wintering costs more than when cows are allowed to harvest the grass on the pasture where it was grown.
Greg details one of the topics taught at their spring grazing school that is coming up this May 2-4th, 2019. Come join us to learn how to make a good living from your forage and livestock on your farm. You should not be forced to sell your livestock in the winter because you ran out of winter stockpiled pasture. You can register by clicking on the grazing school tab on our home page.
Greg Judy speaking at 2018 Groundswell conference in England. The Groundswell conference is the largest and best soil health conference in England.
When starting a grazing operation from scratch with no money, leasing land allows you to build some equity and buy livestock. By staying out of debt, everything you make goes right to your bottom line.
In this video, Greg explains the details of turning an idle farm into a profitable grazing pasture without fertilizer, lime or seed being added. Just cattle and purchased hay after cedars are removed.
Greg explains in this podcast the key issues that propelled their success from near bankruptcy to zero debt today and owning 4 farms along with 12 leased farms.
Greg Judy shows with this video on winter stockpile grazing the benefits of grazing the tips on first rotation through their winter stockpile.
If you learn how to manage it, Kentucky 31 fescue can be some of the best forage on your place. Here’s what I shared with On Pasture. Greg Judy’s Stockpiling and Grazing Advice for Kentucky 31 Fescue