Site icon Clackamas SWCD

Protect Spring Pastures: Grazing Guidelines

The pasture looks inviting, but don't graze too soon!

Spring pastures looks inviting, but don’t graze too soon!

The weather is beginning to warm and spring pasture grasses are growing, but wait! Don’t turn those horses out too early!

While your horses may have been hanging out in a sacrifice area over the winter to protect your pastures from damage, there are good horse health and pasture management reasons to wait before returning them too soon to open fields.

Spring Pasture Recommendations

Follow these spring recommendations to make sure you are not damaging the pastures you have worked so hard to protect over the winter.

According to Dr. Susan Kerr, WSU Regional Livestock and Dairy Extension Specialist, here are a few springtime guidelines:

Learn More About Protecting Spring Pastures

Springtime is the ideal time to assess your pastures and create a pasture management plan. It is also a perfect time to address broadleaf invasive weeds in your pastures. Using a handy tool like the smartphone app iNaturalist can make your assessment easier.

Looking for more helpful hints to help your agricultural endeavors this spring? Check out our handy TIPS on Land and Water Management for Small Acreages in Oregon below!

This booklet will give you lots of information and ideas for a place that you can be proud to own.  We're all part of a watershed and our actions can affect others.  The things that you and your neighbors do can greatly improve the health and the resources we all appreciate about Oregon.

Category:Working lands
Date:October 21, 2014
2.1 MB
1045 Downloads
Details...

If you have questions about pasture management, please contact the Clackamas Soil and Water Conservation District at 503-210-6000 or e-mail your questions to info@conservationdistrict.org.