Stop the Presses

Submitted by Hardscrabble Farmer

Via The NYT

CANADIAN, Texas — Adam Isaacs stood surrounded by cattle in an old pasture that had been overgrazed for years. Now it was a jumble of weeds.

“Most people would want to get out here and start spraying it” with herbicides, he said. “My family used to do that. It doesn’t work.”

Instead, Mr. Isaacs, a fourth-generation rancher on this rolling land in the northeast corner of the Texas Panhandle, will put his animals to work on the pasture, using portable electrified fencing to confine them to a small area so that they can’t help but trample some of the weeds as they graze.

“We let cattle stomp a lot of the stuff down,” he said. That adds organic matter to the soil and exposes it to oxygen, which will help grasses and other more desirable plants take over. Eventually, through continued careful management of grazing, the pasture will be healthy again.

“These cows are my land management tool,” Mr. Isaacs said. “It’s a lot easier to work with nature than against it.”

His goal is to turn these 5,000 acres into something closer to the lush mixed-grass prairie that thrived throughout this part of the Southern Great Plains for millenniums and served as grazing lands for millions of bison.

Mr. Isaacs, 27, runs a cow-calf operation, with several hundred cows and a dozen or so bulls that produce calves that he sells to the beef industry after they are weaned. Improving his land will benefit his business, through better grazing for his animals, less soil and nutrient loss through erosion, and improved retention of water in a region where rainfall averages only about 18 inches a year.

But the healthier ranchland can also aid the planet by sequestering more carbon, in the form of roots and other plant tissues that used carbon dioxide from the air in their growth. Storing this organic matter in the soil will keep the carbon from re-entering the atmosphere as carbon dioxide or methane, two major contributors to global warming.

With the Biden administration proposing to pay farmers to store carbon, soil sequestration has gained favor as a tool to fight climate change. Done on a large enough scale, proponents say, it can play a significant role in limiting global warming.

But many scientists say that claim is overblown, that soils cannot store nearly enough carbon, over a long enough time, to have a large effect. And measuring carbon in soil is problematic, they say.

The soil-improving practices that ranchers like Mr. Isaacs follow are referred to as regenerative grazing, part of a broader movement known as regenerative agriculture.Adam Isaacs feeding a protein supplement to his cattle last month. 

Credit…Brett Deering for The New York Times
A Corriente cow from Mr. Isaacs’ herd.

Credit…Brett Deering for The New York Times

A fence set up on the Isaacs ranch.

Credit…Brett Deering for The New York Times

There are no clear-cut definitions of the terms, but regenerative farming techniques include minimal or no tilling of soil, rotating crops, planting crops to cover and benefit the soil after the main crop is harvested, and greater use of compost rather than chemical fertilizers.

Regenerative grazing means closely managing where and for how long animals forage, unlike a more conventional approach in which animals are left to graze the same pasture more or less continuously. Ranchers also rely more on their animals’ manure to help keep their pastures healthy.

These practices are spreading among farmers and ranchers in the United States, spurred by environmental concerns about what industrialized farming and meat production have done to the land and about agriculture’s contribution to global warming. In the United States, agriculture accounts for about 10 percent of greenhouse gas emissions.

Agribusiness companies and large food producers are launching initiatives to encourage regenerative practices, part of efforts to appeal to consumers concerned about climate change and sustainability.

And the Biden administration, in its initial moves to combat climate change, has cited agriculture as a “linchpin” of its strategy. One idea is to allocate $1 billion to pay farmers $20 for each ton of carbon they trap in the soil.

Proponents of regenerative agriculture have sometimes made extravagant claims about its potential as a tool to fight global warming. Among them is Allan Savory, a farmer originally from Zimbabwe and a leader in the movement, who in an often-cited 2013 TED Talk said that it could “reverse” climate change.

Some research has suggested that widespread implementation of regenerative practices worldwide could have a significant effect, storing as much as 8 billion metric tons of carbon per year over the long term, or nearly as much as current annual emissions from burning of fossil fuels.

A view of the Isaacs ranch in Texas. 

Credit…George Steinmetz for The New York Times

The native tallgrass species that Mr. Isaacs is trying to restore on his ranch. 

Credit…George Steinmetz for The New York Times

The Isaacs ranch is home to several hundred cows and a dozen or so bulls. 

Credit…Brett Deering for The New York Times

While there is broad agreement that regenerative techniques can improve soil health and bring other benefits, some analyses have found that the potential carbon-sequestration numbers are vastly overstated. Among the criticisms, researchers point out that short-term studies may show strong increases in soil carbon, but that these gains decline over time.

“It’s really great to see the private sector and the U.S. government getting serious about reducing agricultural emissions,” said Richard Waite, a senior researcher at the World Resources Institute, an environmental research organization in Washington. But for carbon sequestration in soils, the institute’s analysis suggests that “mitigation opportunities are on the smaller side.”

Focusing on carbon sequestration through soil also risks drawing attention from other important ways to reduce agriculture’s carbon footprint, Mr. Waite said, including improving productivity, reducing deforestation and shifting food consumption to more climate-friendly diets.

Jason Rowntree, a researcher at Michigan State University who was a scientific adviser for five years for an institute founded by Mr. Savory, said that while regenerative grazing “creates a cascade of good things,” his and others’ research has shown the amount of carbon sequestered can vary greatly by region, affected in large part by the amount of rainfall and soil nitrogen available.

“Based on the amounts of these where you are, the ability to build carbon can change dramatically,” he said. “It needs to be considered in a localized context.”

What’s more, Dr. Rowntree said, using carbon in the soil as the basis for judging how well agriculture is contributing to the fight against climate change could be problematic because it is difficult to measure. As a metric, he said, “carbon is probably the worst one we could find.”

Tim LaSalle, a former executive director of Mr. Savory’s institute who later co-founded a sustainable agriculture program at California State University, Chico, said that he views the movement as “a change in looking at soil and its potential.”

“And that’s where science is lacking,” he said, arguing that most research focuses on one or two factors without considering the entire, and complex, plant-soil system.

Dr. LaSalle and colleagues are collecting data from research that shows the benefits of regenerative practices, including field trials using compost inoculated with fungi and other microbes that reduces or eliminates the need for chemical fertilizers.

“We’ve got to get the data out there to shift people’s understanding of what goes on,” he said.

Mr. Isaacs often uses drones to keep an eye on his herds.

Credit…Brett Deering for The New York Times

“We let cattle stomp a lot of the stuff down,” Mr. Issacs said.

Credit…Brett Deering for The New York Times

Mr. Isaacs’ herd in September.

Credit…George Steinmetz for The New York Times

Mr. Isaacs, who studied ranch management at Texas Tech University and worked for two years for the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service, does some measurement and analysis to gauge how well his efforts are working.

“We do a lot of surveys,” he said, taking photos and samples to determine microbial activity in the soil, how well plants are growing and how the mix of species is changing. “That way you can see trends,” he said. “When you’re out here everyday, it’s hard to see what you’re doing.”

He is certain that he is building more carbon in the soil, and thus benefiting the climate to some extent. But from a drive around his ranch, it is clear that a big source of pride is the visible improvements he is seeing in the land.

Stopping in one pasture on the way back to the ranch house he shares with his wife, Aubrie, he pointed to a gentle slope with a mix of vegetation.

As with other pastures at the ranch, Mr. Isaacs has used his electrified fencing to put his cattle to graze on small plots here for short periods of time — 200 head, perhaps, eating and stomping around in a space no larger than a suburban homeowner’s backyard for as little as half an hour. Moving the fencing down the pasture to new plots allows the grazed land time to recover.

“That’s what the bison did,” he said. “They’d come in a million at a time, stomp it all down and move on to fresh pasture. And they wouldn’t come back until it was time to graze again.”

The work requires planning and frequent moving of cattle. But Mr. Isaacs is aided by technology — he uses a small drone to help herd the animals, and is investing in devices that will lift fence gates on command from an app on his phone.

The cattle make one pass around much of the ranch in winter, to prepare the land for spring growth. More passes follow in spring or summer, the number depending on largely on rainfall.

“In spring, the forage grows really fast, so we’re rotating cows around the ranch really fast,” Mr. Isaacs said. “As summer progresses and it gets hotter and the growth slows down, we slow the cows down.”

Mr. Isaacs pointed to several tallgrass species growing amid shorter ones on the slope. The intensive grazing and recovery has helped these tallgrasses come back, he said, and the cattle devour them. “In the growing season, this is as good as it gets,” he said.

“As I do better for the soil, it just becomes progressively better and better and you grow more grass,” Mr. Isaacs said. “And as you grow more grass, you get better soils.”

“It’s never ending.”

Mr. Isaacs on a section of his ranch in January. 

Credit…Brett Deering for The New York Times

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38 Comments
Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
February 19, 2021 8:42 am

A topic near and dear to my heart. The movement against meat production came from many sources, one notable one being Diet For A Small Planet, where Ms. Lappe pushed for a non-meat agriculture. She had great notions about farming and boldly stated that there was no need for livestock because land could be used to grow grains and beans and such. She was boldly ignorant about land, and the fact that much land is best used for grazing and is pure crap for growing crops.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Mygirl....maybe
February 19, 2021 9:51 am

….and she’s boldly ignorant of biology it seems as well. My diet wouldn’t work for her, nor an asian diet for me, or her diet for a south american. Everyone has different nutritional needs.

And besides, I can’t say I’ve every seen a healthy looking vegan.

Stucky
Stucky
February 19, 2021 8:49 am

Very useful info. I’m putting my cattle out first thing tomorrow morning.

DirtpersonSteve
DirtpersonSteve
February 19, 2021 8:51 am

“It’s a lot easier to work with nature than against it.”

That’s the money shot of the article.

Then they bring in climate change experts that probably have zero experience growing food but plenty of experience consuming food to say this really doesn’t work.

Anyone that has farmed or gardened knows that healthy soil is the key to healthy plants. Soil isn’t just a lump of dirt to spray with chemicals to achieve the desired result. Soil is a complex composed of billions of microbes, fungi, and minerals that all work together.

Fortunately many are waking up to realize modern Ag methods aren’t much different than strip mining for food.

I’m so eager to get my hands dirty again once this winter ends!

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  DirtpersonSteve
February 19, 2021 9:17 am

I’m paraphrasing but Bill Gates from hell once said something to the effect of “There’s nothing to farming. You just drop in a seed and it grows”. And people think he is smart. I just think he is a snake oil salesman.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  Mary Christine
February 19, 2021 9:31 am

I think that was Bloomberg, during his abbreviated run for President last year.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
  Hardscrabble Farmer
February 19, 2021 10:22 am

Funny, I got the two demons mixed up.

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  Mary Christine
February 19, 2021 10:45 am

The arrogance was the memorable part, the sources are always the same.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  Mary Christine
February 19, 2021 12:38 pm

Keyword…!

niebo
niebo
  DirtpersonSteve
February 19, 2021 9:29 pm

strip mining for food.

When I steal your analogy, I will give you credit

I’m so eager to get my hands dirty again once this winter ends!

Me too!!!

CCRider
CCRider
February 19, 2021 8:52 am

I love stories like this. It’s individuals working within their own communities to improve soils-and life- one family at a time. Joel Salatin calls this process the Serengeti process. In the African plains, the herbivores come through and ‘mow the lawn’. Followed by birds that feast on the bugs generated from the dung then followed by the wildebeests who turn the soil, incorporating the dung into the soil and aerating it at the same time. It’s nature’s (God’s-if you will) way of balancing.

That government will play a positive role in the process is dubious at best to me.

Llpoh
Llpoh
February 19, 2021 8:54 am

Sure is a lot of global warming in Texas at the moment.

Stucky
Stucky
  Llpoh
February 19, 2021 8:57 am

Hey, Chief … I gave you a shout-out in the Texas-Promised Land thread.

====

“Lastly, exactly WHERE are these geo-engineers? America? Many countries? Do they work in an office building? Does it take ALL of them (how many are there?) to make weather the size of Texas? (My fear here is that one rogue dickhead could turn Australia into the Antarctica … then Llpoh would have to move back to America.).”

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
  Llpoh
February 19, 2021 9:25 am

Not only TX. We got about 10″ of globull warming covering the ground this week in W. TN and temperatures in the low single digits, something really unusual for us.

Doctor de Vaca
Doctor de Vaca
February 19, 2021 8:57 am

Estimates of 60 million North American Buffalo at the end of the 18th century before they were damn near slaughtered to extinction. That many bison can’t be wrong…the majority of the Great Plains from Canada to Texas is best meant as pasture.

Mustang
Mustang
February 19, 2021 9:00 am

Please look up “Greg Judy Regenerative Rancher”. Your welcome.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
February 19, 2021 9:21 am

“other important ways to reduce agriculture’s carbon footprint, Mr. Waite said, including improving productivity, reducing deforestation and shifting food consumption to more climate-friendly diets.”

It is amazing how they all sing from the same hymnal – meat bad, artificial meat good.

Mary Christine
Mary Christine
February 19, 2021 9:24 am

Oops! The phrase

as a tool to fight global warming.

was used in the piece. I thought they weren’t supposed to use that one anymore. I thought “climate change” were the new buzzwords.

I’m not knocking the story. I think there are a lot of things that can be done to improve the way we farm so we don’t destroy the soil and the land with it. They just ruin everything when they bring in politicized junk science like global warming.

You cannot fight climate change. If the sun/earth relationship is ready for a new cycle of cold or warm, we can’t stop it. We can make things worse or better but we can’t stop what the sun does.

Anyway, who does this guy think he is, raising cattle? We have to eat bugs and fake beef. Does he not know that?

Mygirl....maybe
Mygirl....maybe
  Mary Christine
February 19, 2021 9:40 am

He’s raising Corriente, not Angus or Herefords, which is interesting. Corriente are a small and hardy breed, not really all that good for beef production. Most steer ropers hire out corriente for their roping sport.
comment image

Machinist
Machinist
February 19, 2021 9:38 am

My take-away was that the ranchers grow grass, while
the Geo-techies use grass and blow the smoke up your ass.

Mustang
Mustang
February 19, 2021 9:41 am

Admin., please stop censoring my comments. Thanks.

Long Time Lurker
Long Time Lurker
  Mustang
February 19, 2021 3:55 pm

That does not happen on this site. The site may eat your comment in the spam filter tho..

Shotgun Trooper
Shotgun Trooper
February 19, 2021 10:13 am

Forget CO2. It’s the most valuable trace gas on the planet. In south central PA for 100 years, we rotated 100 angus between two large pastures every 2 months during good weather. Cow crap grows great pasture if you let it. Half the farm was for growing hay. 1/4 was two pastures. 1/4 was woodland. Didn’t know how good I had it.

brian
brian
February 19, 2021 10:23 am

I was thinking this would be a good article to read, we’d looked at buying in that area a couple years back, but it soon devolved to a load of junk pap.

The whole CO2 as a pollutant infuriates me no end and I quit listening pretty much after that.

Not entirely sure why cattle farmers in Texas hate sheep so much. On our small acreage we rotated our animals to keep weeds down and not to over graze a patch. We didn’t have much space so it had to be utilized best we could. There are weeds that the cows will not eat but the sheep love. So mixing a small herd of sheep into the cows will get rid of the weeds and sheep fertilize as they go about their business, who knew!?!?

If I remember correctly I think we replanted the pastures maybe twice in ten years. We used a pasture mix of grasses, clover and alfalfa. Just before planting we moved the hogs into the area and they tilled everything up. We basically flattened it and reseeded after the hogs did their work.

Managing land isn’t hard if you use a bit of observation. Old methods are better for the soil, imo, that the chemical sterilization a lot of farms are using today. I remember the soils as a kid in Saskatchewan. Thick black as spades, as opposed to today that same soil is grey. Back in the old day us kids drovw the tractor thru the fields with a shit spreader and loved doing it because thats what kids like doing. Like some adults here today. Today, they don’t till or summer fallow, and seed is injected into the ground along with ammonia, thats it. Sprayed with roundup a couple times a growing season and chemical fertilizer mid season.

Just me but my memories of the food back then is that it was very tasty. Childhood memories are often askew but when we raised our own produce and livestock, proved to be accurate. Even our kids, young adults, will pine about how tasty our products were and miss it. Two of them hunt for farm product, one eats at taco bell. Two daughters and a son, which eats at taco bell?? 🙂

ordo ab chao
ordo ab chao
  brian
February 19, 2021 11:30 am

“Not entirely sure why cattle farmers in Texas hate sheep so much”

I don’t know, but it looks like it goes a long way back….lol

annuit coeptis novus ordo seclorum <—–==== NLP maybe?

Hardscrabble Farmer
Hardscrabble Farmer
  ordo ab chao
February 19, 2021 12:38 pm

It was barbed wire that started it.

Sheep herders started using barbed wire to enclose their land and cattlemen used to free ranging considered the fences as a threat to their way of life. They called it The Fence Cutting Wars- 1880’s up until the turn of the century.

brian
brian
  Hardscrabble Farmer
February 19, 2021 12:51 pm

Didn’t know that… many Thx

ordo ab chao
ordo ab chao
  Hardscrabble Farmer
February 19, 2021 5:03 pm

Maybe a little yes, and a little no, HSF….

https://truewestmagazine.com/conflict-on-the-range/#:~:text=Cattlemen%20did%20not%20like%20sheep%20because%20they%20believed,they%20did%20not%20want%20to%20share%20the%20range.

“Cattlemen did not like sheep because they believed the smaller animals with their sharply pointed hoofs cut the range grasses and made the ground stink so that cattle wouldn’t use it. Quite simply, they did not want to share the range.”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheep_Wars

“The sheepherders were always considered the weaker, or lesser, of the antagonists. They were often advocates of free grazing on public land, while the cattlemen typically fenced off the territory whether it was public or private land.”

There was plenty of conflict between cattlemen over wired pastures or open range….they even made a good movie about it, lol:

When my wife was a young single mother of 18, she worked a two year stretch building fence for a contractor who did work for various large ranches in the Osage ….one ranch contract we still drive by on occasion is the Drummond Ranch (that gal is a ‘ranch cooking expert’ on Fox-in-the-Friends henhouse a.m.- a fair number of the local folk don’t think she ever does much cooking…haha)

annuit coeptis novus ordo seclorum <<——====

I was just messin' around a bit with the Duke clip….but that man in your article lives in a region not too far from where my only nephew by blood is living–fresh out of K-State with an engineering degree. My wife's got a niece just across the line in Okla….fwiw.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  brian
February 19, 2021 11:59 am

We run cows then sheep then goats in rotation. The key is to not let the weeds flower and go to seed. The perennials take a few years to kill off and the annual seeds will sprout for a few years. I also regularly walk with my scythe and take out bull thistle.

brian
brian
  Anonymous
February 19, 2021 12:13 pm

Exactly… and your pastures are likely very healthy. And far less work.

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 19, 2021 12:14 pm

It started out to be a good article then deteriorated in another screed about CO2. I’ll give you the visual that I used for my children way back in the 80’s. If you have a box with 100k ping pong balls in it 78k are green N2, 21k are blue O2, before the industrial revolution 35 of them would be evil red CO2, now 2 decades into the 21st century there are 40 of them lurking around.

grace country pastor
grace country pastor
  Anonymous
February 19, 2021 1:04 pm

What I noticed? It’s “carbon” they seem to be railing against. As if carbon is the problem. Carbon is the physical chemical basis for life itself! All life.

Hmmmm… 🤔 AI/AO is silicon based. Was the Terminator series science fiction?

splurge
splurge
  grace country pastor
February 19, 2021 2:08 pm

or wish list?

Machinist
Machinist
  grace country pastor
February 19, 2021 3:57 pm

If I remember correctly, in an episode of Star Trek the Capt. et. al. captured an ancient satellite that had been hit by an asteroid… Anyway it’s name (so it “thought”) was Nomad. It’s (AI-ish new goal, after reprogramming itself) was to eliminate all “carbon units“, as they were clearly inferior.

Long Time Lurker
Long Time Lurker
  grace country pastor
February 19, 2021 4:01 pm

GCP – It is nuts to realize how stupid these people are. CO2 is plant food. CO2 + water + sunlight and the magic of photosynthesis is the the building block of all life on earth. So lets bring CO2 to zero. The stupid, it hurts.

Cowboy
Cowboy
February 19, 2021 3:46 pm

There is a lady over in Wyoming who will rent out her goat herd-with delivery included-to come spend a couple weeks munching on unwanted pasture weeds. One might assume she doesn’t charge extra for the poop they leave behind to help rebuild the soil.

gilberts
gilberts
February 19, 2021 4:51 pm

NRCS is an awesome organization. You might hate the FedGov and the USDA, but NRCS are really cool. They have students and researchers who work to study soil and healthy ag practices. They promote sustainability and alternate farm practices. And, best of all, they run a program to fund high tunnel greenhouses for people who will practice organic farming. The program in my area is packed with folks starting their first gardens. The NRCS funds up to 75% of the high tunnel cost. It’s pretty cool.

For instance, here’s Ray Archuletta showing the advantages of no-til farming.