Title: Gabe Brown Case Study
1Gabe Brown Case Study
(ver. 7.2009)
2(No Transcript)
3A Little History...
4Feed the soil, harvest the sunlightTie the
grazing and cropping systems together
5Ranch Goal Sustainability and Soil Health
6Cropping SystemTillage is Catastrophic!
7 Fields have been no-tilled from 8 to 22 years
8Crop Diversity
- Alfalfa
- Corn for grain and earlage
- Pea/Vetch
- Oat/Millet
- Winter Triticale
- Barley and Red Clover
9Land Roller
with Twin Blades
10Preparing Fields for No-Till2002 Hayland 2003
Cropland
11Nutrient ManagementTriple beater trucks custom
spread manure evenly
12Additional food for the micro and macro fauna
20 ton per acre is spread every third to fifth
year
13Corn planted into alfalfa stubblethe manure is
consumed by August
142005 Corn Income (per acre)
15Earlage is another option, allowing good ground
litter and early fall grazing
16Value of Corn Aftermath Grazing
- Corn was harvested as earlage
- Aftermath was grazed
- 83 bred yearling heifers for 47 days
- 83 X 47 days 3901 grazing days
- 3901 X .70/day 2731.00
- 62 acres grazed
- Value of aftermath grazing
- 44.04/acre
17Managing residue removal this field was already
grazed
18Field pea with hairy vetch as a companion crop,
seeded together
19Removing the canopy in July
20Vetch ready for harvest in August
21Cattle readily graze vetch
22Baled vetch, another option
23Pea/Vetch Economics
- Total Expense 137.23 per acre
- Total Income 450.17 per acre
- Net Income 312.94 per acre
24Everleaf Oat
25Yield 18 ton per acre
26 Preparing for the next crop
27Millet is an option
28Winter triticale seeded on oat stubble
29Winter triticale provides good ground cover
following silage crops
30Harvest options
31 Forage Barley and Red Clover
32Red clover seeded at 6 pounds per acre, 1.00 per
pound
33No chemical weed control during the growing season
34Yield 17 ton per acre
35Red Clover survived the heavy canopy
36The companion crop allows a live cover to
continue after harvest
37Red Clover options fall graze, spring graze,
hay or plant corn
38Barley Red Clover Economics
- Total Income 395.70 per acre.
- Total Expense
- 138.74 per acre.
- Net Income 256.96 per acre.
39Whats driving the System?
- 1. Diversity
- 2. Litter
- 3. Cover Companion crops
- 4. Full Growing Season
- 5. Soil Health
- 6. Allowing the system to work
401. Diversity
Cool-Season Broadleaf
412. Litter
423. Cover and Companion Crops
434. Utilize the full growing season
445. Soil Health
45Organic Matter
- 1994 Organic Matter 2.6
- 2004 Organic Matter 4.2
46Gabes Transport System Corn roots with highly
colonized mycorrhizal hyphae and arbuscules
Site location Browns Gelbvieh Ranch - 2004
Photographs of stained roots also confirm the
presence of mycorrhizal structures within the
roots Dr Kristine Nichols, Soil Microbiologist,
USDA-ARS-NDPRL
47Protecting Gabes Transport System
- glomalin coating is speculated to protect
conduit hyphae from nutrient loss and microbial
attack and acts as a glue in soil aggregate
formation - Dr. Kristine Nichols, Soil Mircrobiologist,
USDA-ARS-NDPRL
48Gabes Revolving Nutrient Bank Account
- 1.0 OM 10,000 lbs Carbon, 1,000 lbs Nitrogen,
100 lbs Phosphorous, and 100 lbs of Sulfur - Mineralization Rate 2-3 from Organic N to
Inorganic N, which does not stop at harvest time - Transport system has highly colonized levels of
mycorrhizal hyphae and arbuscules - Glomalin concentrations are similar to some
native grassland soils - Plants can take-up use the nutrients made
available through biological processes more
easily and efficiently compared with chemical
fertilizers. Clapperton - Additional nutrient sources are earthworms,
manure, starter fertilizer
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50Soil Foodweb Analysis
- 2003 Pea/Vetch (manure),
- no commercial fertilizer applied
- 2004 Barley/Clover, 100 lbs urea. November soil
test indicated 16 lbs available N - 2005 Spring applied 225 lbs 28.5-13.5-11
- July 14th 200 lbs of available N, released over
the remaining growing season - 2005 Corn yield 143 bushels
516. Allowing the system to work
- Commercial fertilizer rates were decreased
- Yields increased or maintained
- The Bankers comments
- Changes in legume nodulation
- Options more options
52Pushing the Cropping System to Fail
53How far can the system go?
- If you get up each morning and apply the
accepted best management practices, you will be
successful by yesterdays standards. Only when
you try something new do you have a chance to
move ahead. -Steve Suther - Risk is innovations partner
54Discussion on Local Situations
- What are typical cropping systems in your area?
- What is their effect on soil quality?
- If the effects are not positive, what can be done
about it?