In this fourth episode we are joined by renowned conservation grazier Bill Grayson who brings us his perspective on the concept of optimal carrying capacity and the way that it is deployed within the system he and his wife Cath run as part of the Morecambe Bay Conservation Grazing Company. He discusses how they go about planning putting animals on to a piece of land, the various practical considerations, and the role livestock play and the benefits they can bring to the land, along with the main challenges in relation to the conservation grazing picture against a backdrop of a pervading opinion of ruminants causing climate change. We touch on the impacts of stocking rate, forage management, breed selection, extended calving period, the set stocking versus mob grazing approach, and the difference between ‘maximum sustainable output’ (essentially an economic interpretation) and optimal carrying capacity, and how it fits with agroecological principles.
Show notes: Read about the Chillingham cattle, explore the ‘Less is more' report and the ‘Farming for Change’ model Bill refers to, and access another interesting read recommended by Bill here: https://tinyurl.com/5dr8kv75
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