Wednesday, January 14, 2026

The question is what do we do with the overmature pasture and hay we have to contend with now and as our winter feed supply?

Managing grazed pastures this spring has been a challenge. Should you focus on quantity or quality?

There are many benefits to combining pasture-based livestock production and cash grain production on the same farm.

Take a good, critical look at the grazing resources on your farm, advises Holmes County Extension Agent Dean Slates in this week's "All About Grazing" column.

In management intensive grazing, energy is the limiting nutrient for high producing dairy cows.

What's the best pasture mix for llamas and alpacas? They're not picky, but an Ohio State grazing expert offers tips in this week's All About Grazing column.

Extension agent does th e math for the value of organic fertilizers.

Grazing columnist Mark Landefeld writes from personal experience: Getting started is the hardest part.

Kura establishment has been characterized this way: "First year it sleeps, second year it creeps, third year it leaps."

Developing and managing what you have is often more cost effective than trying to completely renovate a pasture or grazing system.