Munsch has been preaching the economic benefits of managed grazing for years, sharing the cost breakdown from his own farm in Coon Valley. But with the help of a UW-Madison initiative, that data has been turned into a tool that farm service professionals and dairy producers can use to look at the cost breakdown of switching a farm's animals from a confinement system to managed grazing.
The Heifer Grazing Compass looks at the operating costs of grazing, how much land is needed to support a herd and how adopting a grazing system financially compares in the long term to a farm’s current strategy.
John Hendrickson, farm viability specialist for UW-Madison’s Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems, helped develop the tool for the Grassland 2.0 project. Started in 2020 using a $10 million grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the collaboration between researchers from UW-Madison and other universities, farmers and agriculture industry leaders is working to encourage farmers to adopt the use of grasslands.
"We want farms to be financially viable and sustainable for the long term," he said. "But of course the Grasslands 2.0 project also has this larger look at the entire landscape and climate change and soil erosion and what can we do to have a more sustainable agricultural system on the landscape."
Hendrickson said perennial crops have been shown to help hold soil in place and sequester carbon into the land.
But even with the scientific evidence, Munsch said it can feel like a leap of faith for a farm to upend their way of operating.
"All that this tool does is creates a little more certainty about the economic consequences of doing this, and the animal performance consequences and the reduced labor that we have seen when we've looked at this on some farms," he said.
Munsch said these promised savings are crucial to dairy farmers when they’re bringing new heifers into their herd that aren’t yet producing milk. He said farms have always strived to care for these animals as cheaply as possible and the Grazing Compass can show them which model is actually the most cost-effective for their farm.
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