When it comes to planning for next grazing season, having a grazing plan is critical preparation. Everyone can benefit from grazing planning. You don't have to be a adaptive grazing expert to use a grazing chart.
But getting started with a grazing planning chart can be an intimidating project. If you're planning a grazing chart for the first time, all the cells to fill in with ADAs, ADs, rest periods, AUs can get your head spinning before you even begin.
A grazing chart is a living document. It's not a set-it-and-forget-it one time deal. Use the grazing chart as a guiding tool to think through key grazing decisions before cattle hit your pastures, and to make decisions during the season. This is the most powerful part of a grazing chart!
Use the grazing chart effectively, and it will make you better at grazing management every step of the way.
Grazing planning starts with planning your grazing around key dates.
Here's what it looks like to plan grazing exclusion events on PastureMap's grazing chart.
Ready to start grazing planning on PastureMap? Start your free trial to plan this season on our online grazing chart.
For more on how to calculate how many days to graze each pasture, read our post on how to calculate stocking rates and carrying capacity. For each month that you plan to stock a certain number of AUs (animal units), calculate how many days of grazing they will need. For example, if you have 100 head of 800 lb steers, you will have 100 x 0.8 AU, or 80 ADs per day of forage demand.
Match your herd's feed demand with your available forage in ADs in each pasture, to calculate how many days your cattle can graze in each pasture.
A strong cup of coffee with a calculator, or an online stocking calculator like PastureMap's makes short work of this grazing math.
Now it's time to plan out the graze periods. Make sure to plan around your key dates. You may need to plan and re-plan the grazing plan through pastures several times. Your grazing chart is a living document! Laminating a big chart, hanging it on the wall and using a dry-erase pen is a useful way to do grazing planning with your team.
Make sure to think about how your cattle will flow from one pasture to the next around your ranch. It's helpful to have a map pulled up with gates and water infrastructure. This helps you mentally plan the movement of cattle around the ranch. Make sure you have pastures with adequately recovered forage ahead of you. Don't graze yourself into a corner!
You can use either PastureMap or Google Earth to map out pasture names, water, and gate infrastructure. Or get a printed paper map from your NRCS office.
You can also do your grazing planning directly on the map, if you prefer to have a visual path of the planned moves for your cattle.
Again - your grazing chart is a living document for making decisions. h
On PastureMap, we track planned vs actual grazing periods, recovery days, and SDAs for everyone using the grazing chart. All you need to do is log grazing records.
If you need to adjust your future planned moves based on what you're seeing in your actual grazing, we make that easy. Just adjust or delete any planned move and the rest of your grazing plan will adjust with it.
Grazing planning is not a set-it-and-forget it process. The grazing chart is a living tool for you to make better grazing management decisions. Your decisions are what matches forage supply and cattle feed demand throughout the season. This is adaptive grazing management.
Ready to get started? Sign up for PastureMap's free trial to plan next season with our online grazing chart.