Your reading list

Drought damaged pasture needs TLC

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: July 25, 2002

LOMOND, Alta. – Even with good spring moisture in the far southern

portions of the Prairies, overgrazed and depleted pastures will still

require several years to recover from successive drought years.

“Drought has had a very negative effect on pasture productivity and on

forage growth,” said forage specialist Tracy Dow of Alberta Agriculture.

“We’ll have to give it a lot of tender loving care and time to

recover.”

He recently told a group of producers at a range management course in

Read Also

A photo of a bend in a creek on a nice sunny day showing extensive damage to the bank due to livestock grazing.

Alberta eases water access for riparian restoration

Alberta government removes requirement for temporary diversion licence to water plants up to 100 cubic metres per day for smaller riparian restoration projects

Lomond that annual forages are one way to take the pressure off

perennial pastures.

Grazing fall-seeded crops such as rye is common in Alberta, but

producers may consider other cereals such as oats, barley, winter

wheat, winter triticale and Italian ryegrass. Many people already use

these as silage crops.

It is important to link cattle’s nutrient needs with the time the

forages are most productive. He said it will be more economical this

year to build body condition in cows before they head into the winter,

when feed is likely to be in short supply in many places.

“Not all the cereals are going to perform the same throughout the year

and it depends on what kind of program you want.”

Spring-seeded winter cereals produce enough vegetation in the year of

seeding without forming heads. They plateau in late summer, while fall

seeding brings on substantial growth in early spring.

Crops such as oats and barley are available for grazing within six to

seven weeks of seeding.

Average barley yield is 3,080 kilograms per acre with 64.5 percent

total digestible nutrients, or TDN. Oats provide about 3,484 kg and 64

percent TDN.

Interseeding crops is another possibility. These crops should be seeded

in equal parts at three-quarters of the regular rate depending on

moisture conditions. If moisture is adequate, add nitrogen fertilizer

for extra growth.

A barley-oat mixture can yield 3,517 kg per acre. Barley and fall rye

yields less at 2,736 kg, but the nutritional value is higher.

“Oats tends to be the highest yielding of the annual crops and if you

want to enhance the TDN, include some fall rye in the mix,” Dow said.

If a spring and fall crop is mixed, cattle eat the lush, quick-growing

spring crop first and eat the later-developing fall cereal last.

Mixtures may also be harvested for silage. If moisture is adequate, a

dose of nitrogen can encourage regrowth for added grazing opportunities

later in the season.

About the author

Barbara Duckworth

Barbara Duckworth

Barbara Duckworth has covered many livestock shows and conferences across the continent since 1988. Duckworth had graduated from Lethbridge College’s journalism program in 1974, later earning a degree in communications from the University of Calgary. Duckworth won many awards from the Canadian Farm Writers Association, American Agricultural Editors Association, the North American Agricultural Journalists and the International Agriculture Journalists Association.

explore

Stories from our other publications