muddyviewrancher
Active member
Was wondering if anyone has taken one of these courses,and if so what do u think.
I think that the Holistic Management class is well worth the money. I also have been to the ranching for profit school. As an employee the HRM class has been invaluable. The RFP school was way more intense, lots of it made since lots of it needed time to soak in. The RFP school seemed pretty fast and furious to me, I would like to take a couple more refresher coarses. To answer the question about numbers, I have applied HRM to large numbers of pairs and yearlings (over 500hd) in pastures averaging in that 450 - 600 acre range. I truly believe that the biggest mistake people make is stereotyping it as intensive grazing. It is just what it says Holistic, looking at your entire operation as a whole and using planning aids to fit. There is not a book or a model to follow that will give you all the answers, it is a guide and every operation will be different.
I will try not to rant here. One of my biggest complaints with HRM is the people that are choosen to educate the public through extension and so fourth. I have been to numerous ranch tours and seminars where someone was choosen to tell about their HRM practices. Most of those ranches are applying intensive grazing practices but not HRM management. You can turn anything around to make it look or sound like you want it to, in the end a spade is a spade. If you are grazing the crap out of your productive land and trying to tell yourself that your improving the land and maximizing profits, what are you doing for your less productive land and true animal production on the whole operation. Almost every single one of those people talk about the productive ground and when you ask how they manage they rest of the ranch they don't implement hardly any kind of management plan on it. Then you here how it is not possible to implement a HRM plan on the other ground. That is the same problem everyone else is facing, they don't see how to make it work. The whole point is to open your mind and look at things from the possible side not the impossible. There is nothing in the planning manual that says you have to move your cows everyday. If you plan your grazing system around recovery, everything else falls into place. The key is enough rest so that your pastures will recover and improve if there is improvement to be made. Remember the whole picture is not just grazing, include family, financial, animal production, and life goals. Pretty soon you have a well oilded machine. In the end sustainable production and not milking the cash cow is what truly matters. How many quick fix guys do you know that are still around. Sorry to carry on. I have seen so many BS representations, I truly believe in HRM. It is a can do thought process and attitude, not a convienent management tool. When everyone else is asking why I ask why not, maybe the impossible is possible.
flyingS said:Eatbeef my philosopy is a long one and I know that sometimes people get tired of reading long post. If you all would like for me to share my thoughts I will gladly do that. The first response is anything can be managed or mis-managed. I know guys that graze like they have for the last 50 years that have more sand showing than they ought to. On the other hand I know some that are on a mob grazing system that have lots of sand as well. Common sense has to prevail and experience is an invalueable tool. I was fortuneate enough to have worked for an extremely progressive outfit that educated me very well, not only through educational classes but practical experience and several experienced role models.
To answer your question briefly, no one should ever graze to the point that the soil will erode in any grazing system. This is one of the mis-perceptions that the people I talked about in my earlier post give other producers. Anyone who tries to maximize anyone aspect is not truly holistic now are they, you have to optimize every aspect in order for them to all be sustainable. Everything has to be within reason.
:agree:RSL said:flying s - i agree with your posts. The biggest thing in holistic management and RFP is to figure out your goals and then work on how to get there. The people part (attitudes, etc) is huge. Many ranches run on a holistic plan without being aware of it as such, and many others have taken all the courses and still don't have a holistic approach. It is a bout much more than cow numbers and grass management.