Pasture Production Management
Pasture production management involves site selection, variety selection,
and production inputs, among other things. Pasture management can vary from a
casual approach to intensive longrange planning. Planning is needed. Experience,
skill, and common-sense judgment are important.
Many horsemen tend to be content to feed processed feeds and ignore pasture potential.
Sometimes with high-value animals, that is wise. It is also wise to consider that good pasture can be
nutritional and more economical than processed feeds.
Pastures can be unproductive, weedy, low quality, and barely nutritional. They can also be
the opposite.
All horsemen cannot be forage production experts. However, to realize the benefits, they
must use basic production requirements, know the science of pasture management, and apply acceptable
use techniques.
There are many aspects of good pasture management. The scope of this writing does not
allow thorough coverage of them, but you can obtain additional management information from the
Noble Foundation, Oklahoma State University extension and research personnel, and other agricultural
information services.
If you already have a pasture base, seek information on how to manage it. Use it partly
according to horse nutritional requirements. Manage it for good cost-effectiveness per unit of forage
or per day of horse feed. Plan and manage it for the long term.
If you are fortunate enough to choose what pasture to develop, study your lesson well. Seek
professional advice, decide what is best for your region, soil, capabilities, and horses, and then
establish and manage the pasture well.
Some important pasture management considerations are
- kind and variety of forages adapted to soils and climate of your area
- establishment procedures for good, early, useful pasture
- resistance and tolerance to horse grazing and trampling in your area
- need for fertilization and response to fertilization
- methods of weed control
- need for rotational grazing approaches
- response to use and needed recovery periods
- palatability of the forages for horses
Forage Fertilization for Production
Forage fertilization is almost always crucial for good production and successful
horse pasture management. No forages produce well without good soil fertility,
and few soils have enough inherent fertility for upper-level production. Most
soils in the central United States must be fertilized to produce improved forages
well.
Grasses need primarily nitrogen, but also phosphorus, potassium, and lime in many cases, as do
legumes. Fertilization recommendations should be made on the basis of soil test results, objectives, and
experience.
Fertilization must be done with some goal in mind:
- You can apply fertilizer at a minimal rate just to maintain grass stands.
Some operators might wish this rate to be the minimal effective rate, or just
enough to carry light stocking.
- You can apply fertilizer to get the most effective forage production per
pound of fertilizer applied, that is, apply it at a rate at which pounds of
forage produced per pound of fertilizer would be judged cost effective at
an upper level of forage production. There are many ranges of fertilization
applications that are acceptable for the land, the forage, and the operator's
goals. Seek professional advice to determine the amount to apply.
- You can fertilize at a maximum effective rate. This application would yield
the greatest forage volume over the years.
Objectives vary, and what one considers well fertilized may not always be so. What is suitable
for one horse pasture may not be for another. What is good for another livestock operation may be too
good for a casual horse pasture, or vice versa.
Native range grasses are generally not fertilized. If it is judged wise to fertilize them, use low
amounts of actual nitrogen per acre at 30 to 75 pounds, and phosphorus and potassium according to soil
test results. Fertilize only once per season. This recommendation also applies to 'King Ranch' bluestem
pastures.
Other grasses that respond well to fertilization include bermudagrass, Old World bluestems,
crabgrass, weeping lovegrass, and winter pasture from small grains, ryegrass, rescuegrass, fescue, and
other cool-season perennials. The following is a fertilizer guide for producing forage for a moderatequality horse pasture or meadow in southern Oklahoma and surrounding areas. This summary is
presented for either warm- or cool-season forages; read carefully.
Early Season
Top-dress with nitrogen to apply 50 to 100 pounds of actual nitrogen per acre.
The date of this application would be about April 15 to May 15 for the summer
grasses and just before or immediately after stand emergence for the annual
winter pastures, usually about September 1 to October 15. An application of
30 to 50 pounds of actual nitrogen per acre could be considered a minimal application
for simple stand survival, stand maintenance, and low production if it were
the only application.
Midseason
Top-dress with nitrogen to apply an additional 50 to 100 pounds of actual nitrogen
per acre about June 1 to 15 for the summer grasses and about January 1 to February
15 for winter pastures. Spring applications during April should be considered
for late winter pasture or early summer grasses.
Legume pastures should be fertilized according to soil test results for phosphorus, potassium,
and lime. Grass and legume mixture pastures can be fertilized relatively lightly with nitrogen, at 30
to 50 pounds of actual nitrogen per acre, to allow maintenance of the legume and get some added
grass production. Legume pastures in southern Oklahoma and surrounding areas almost always need
phosphorus, and they often need potassium and lime.
The above information is only a guide and is far from the upper limit possible or the individual
accuracy desired. The scope of this writing does not allow adequate discussion of fertilization
methods or the rate variations and type of fertilizer. That information must be acquired elsewhere.
High nitrate content in forage may present potential animal health problems. For horse
pasture, it is wise to top-dress several times at a lower acceptable rate than to top-dress once at an
extremely high rate.
The most efficient forage production is from a higher-rate, one-time application coinciding
with the warm moist seasons. Part of the reason for using lower rates of nitrogen is due to uncertainty
in some horse situations. The nitrogen fertilization rates discussed above, however, are not
considered high.
Visits to several veterinary schools and diagnostic labs have failed to verify
any serious or common problems with nitrates or our suggested nitrogen rates.
There has been little problem with nitrates in horse nutrition.
Precautions in pasture fertilization and liming should be observed:
- Do not spill fertilizer or lime in horse areas.
- If any is spilled, thoroughly clean it up and till the soil if necessary.
Take no chances! If there is any doubt, remove horses until after a rain and
new forage growth.
- Do liming without horses on the area, and keep them off limed pasture until
after a rain. Lime dust inhalation may cause respiratory problems.
- In a single application, do not use excessively high nitrogen rates, generally
over 100 pounds of actual nitrogen per acre in southern Oklahoma and the surrounding
regions.
- If fertilizer adheres to wet forage, it is wise to withhold horses until
after a rain. The best choice is not to fertilize when forage is wet.
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