1 / 43

Paddock Layout and Design

Paddock Layout and Design. Before Building Fence. Guideline #1: Flexibility. Before Building Fence. Guideline #1: Flexibility Guideline #2: Walk pastures and use maps. Before Building Fence. Guideline #1: Flexibility Guideline #2: Walk pastures and use maps

xena
Télécharger la présentation

Paddock Layout and Design

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Paddock Layout and Design

  2. Before Building Fence Guideline #1: Flexibility

  3. Before Building Fence Guideline #1: Flexibility Guideline #2: Walk pastures and use maps

  4. Before Building Fence Guideline #1: Flexibility Guideline #2: Walk pastures and use maps Guideline #3: Have at least 11 paddocks

  5. Paddock Layout Design Fixed or Flexible

  6. Before Building Fence Guideline #4: Use a psychological barrier Perimeter:Good perimeter fence Internal: Low cost electric Train: Stocker cattle

  7. Before Building Fence Guideline #4: Use a psychological barrier Perimeter: Good perimeter fence Internal: Low cost electric Train: Stocker cattle Guideline #5: Similar paddock production, not size

  8. Uniform Production is Key! • Each Paddock in the System should contain enough land to produce Approximately the same forage DM (Dry Matter) • varying soil types • paddock size • productive capabilities • forage species

  9. Before Building Fence Guideline #6: Fence with the contour of the land

  10. Before Building Fence Guideline #6: Fence with the contour of the land Guideline #7: Walkways on higher, drier soils

  11. Before Building Fence Guideline #8: Limit access to streams

  12. Before Building Fence Guideline #8: Limit access to streams Guideline #9: Plan now for water supply

  13. Before Building Fence Guideline #8: Limit access to streams Guideline #9: Plan now for water supply Guideline #10: Plan for access to emergency areas for drought, floods and mud

  14. Number of Paddocks in System • As the # of Paddocks increases the level of Management also increase! • The length of Grazing period should be…SHORT • Move Livestock Before Grazed Plants Regrow • Vary by season • 2 - 3 days -- Spring • 4 - 5 days -- Summer

  15. Paddock Size VS. Grazing pressure(livestock # & weight) • # of Paddocks is determined by Grazing pressure…Which will affect Paddock Size • Small enough to be Grazed Before Regrowth • No Ideal number…11 often used in 3 day systems giving 30 days of Rest (works well for legumes)

  16. Paddock Layout • Square Paddocks -- as near as possible • uniform grazing • lower fence cost/acre • Wagon wheel designs are the Poorest • poor utilization • poor manure distribution • Increased fencing cost

  17. How Many Paddocks Are Needed • No. of paddocks = Days rest + 1 Days grazing • 15 day rest/ 3 days grazing = 6 paddocks • 15 day rest/ 5 days grazing = 4 paddocks • 30 day rest/ 3 days grazing = 11 paddocks • 44 day rest/4 days grazing = 12 paddocks

  18. How Big Should the Paddocks Be ?

  19. What You Need to Know: 1) Amount of feed animal needs from pasture = [(A X B) - C] X D A = Total body weight of all animals B = DM requirements per day Beef & Sheep - 2.5% - 3% of body weight Dairy - 3.5% - 4% of body weight C = Supplemental feeds (silage, hay, grain) D = Length of grazing period

  20. What You Need to Know: 2) Available forage from the pasture = [(D - E) X F] X G D = Forage height in paddock E = Remaining stubble F = DM yield per acre Range - 100 - 500 pounds of DM per inch of growth per acre G = Utilization rate (75% - 90%)

  21. Beef Example: [(37,500# X 3%) - 0] X 1day = 1,125 pounds of dry matter (DM) needed A = 30 beef cows @ 1250 pounds each = 37,500 pounds of body weight B = DM requirement/day 3% C = 0 = No supplemental feed D = 1 = One day paddock

  22. Beef Example (cont.): [(8” - 3”) X 300#] X 75% = 1,125 # available DM D = Pasture at 8” tall E = 3” remaining stubble F = 300# DM G = Utilization rate 75% (25% wastage)

  23. Beef Example (cont.): Therefore, 1 acre with 1,125# of available DM will supply the DM requirements of the 30 cows for one day.

  24. Dairy Example: [(135,000# X 4%) - 1800#] X 0.5 days = 1,800# dry matter (DM) needed for 1/2 day paddock A = 100 dairy cows @ 1350# each = 135,000 pounds of body weight B = DM requirement/day 4% C = 1800# grain mix D = 0.5 = One half day per paddock

  25. Dairy Example (cont.): [(8” - 3”) X 300#] X 85% = 1,275 # available DM D = Pasture at 8” tall E = 3” remaining stubble F = 300# DM G = Utilization rate 85% (15% wastage)

  26. Dairy Example (cont.): Therefore, approximately 1.5 acres with 1,275# of available DM will supply the forage requirements of the 100 dairy cattle for half a day.

  27. Sheep Example: [(37,500# X 3%) - 0#] X 1 day = 1,125# dry matter (DM) needed A = 250 ewes @ 150# each = 37,500 pounds of body weight B = DM requirement/day 3% C = 0 = No supplemental feed D = 1 = One day per paddock

  28. Sheep Example (cont.): [(8” - 3”) X 300#] X 75% = 1,125 # available DM D = Pasture at 8” tall E = 3” remaining stubble F = 300# DM G = Utilization rate 75% (25% wastage)

  29. Sheep Example (cont.): Therefore, 1 acre with 1,125# of available DM will supply the DM requirements of the 250 ewes for one day.

  30. Case Farm - Existing 114 acres

  31. Case Farm - Intermediate Plan 6 areas

  32. Case Farm - Final Plan 10 paddocks and flexible hay grazing area

  33. Safety First!!!!! Call Before You Dig!!! 1 - 800 - 362 - 2764

More Related