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The Rural Voice, 1988-09, Page 104of the past two years, it seems that the best results come from larger pad- docks, three-quarters of an acre in size, which have a grass -legume mix dominated by orchard grass and white clover. The average stocking rate in the "rational" grazing. That is "designing a grazing system that both stimulates grass growth and regrowth, and enables efficient harvest by grazing stock." Clark is following the ideas of Voison in her research in that she could ruin the root system of the plants. Many North American pasture specialists, like Ann Clark, think that his system should be rejected. In South Africa, at the other end of the world, 58 per cent of agricultural land is in pasture. Savory's theories project was 1.6 steers to 2.1 steers per acre, and this could vary from 4 to 5 steers per acre in the spring down to 1 steer per acre by the end of the grow- ing season. The cattle were rotated depending upon the growth of the pasture. That could be as often as every 3 days, down to every 12 days, allowing each pasture to rest 24 to 36 days. CONFLICTING THEORIES Like any aspect of agriculture, pasture can be managed in different ways and at different intensities. Management will depend on where the farm is, what kind of land is available, rainfall, and even the breed of cattle. Formulae for stocking rates differ ac- cording to how quickly the cattle are rotated around the paddocks, whether you believe in selective or non-selec- tive grazing, and whether you mono - crop your pasture species or go in for a legume -grass mix. Dr. Clark is a proponent of the French grazing specialist Andre Voison, who advocated what he called rotates her cattle depending on how quickly the grass is growing — quickly in the spring, slowly in the summer. She has a high stocking rate in the spring when the grass is grow- ing fast, and she takes steers off the pasture when the summer drought slows the grass down. She will also bring hay land into the pasture rotation after the first cut so that she can increase the acreage while reducing the stocking rate for the summer. There is a connection between what is being done in South Africa and the intensive pasture management in France and Ontario. Allan Savory, who is a well-known — perhaps notorious — pasture management specialist in North America, popular- ized the idea of rotational or cell grazing. He is a South African, and his idea is to have small fenced pad- docks which are grazed very inten- sively for very short periods of time — it could be as short as one day. Savory's methods are still widely used, but besides citing the unmanage- able labour -intensity of his system, critics say the intensity of grazing Hereford -cross steers in the pasture at the Elora Research Station reap the benefits of Ann Clark's pasture management. The grass in the foreground has been top - clipped; this is done once a season. have made a big impact in South Africa, but there has been a ground- swell of objection to this theories. Des Macaskill agrees that the Savory system puts too great a strain on the grass, but his methods of pasture management are different again from Savory's, Voisin's, or Clark's, and he is still getting good results. MACASKILL IN AFRICA In the area of South Africa where Des Macaskill farms, people don't expect more than 20 inches of rain a year. Yet his farm is green and lush. For the past 10 years, he has put all his energy into improving his grazing lands and his herd. He took over a very ill -managed farm and turned it around by taking the land out of corn and putting it all into pasture. He believes that selective grazing is the way to go. He leaves his cattle in the paddock only long enough that they just eat the most palatable spe- cies. In this way only the selected species are stimulated, he says, and SEPTEMBER 1988 27