Vetiver Saved My Herd

Similar documents
THE PROJECT OF PROMOTION ON VETIVER PLANTING ON UPPER WATERSHED AREAS WITH COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION

VETIVER FORAGE and BIOMASS

Sohel Rana and AKM Fazlur Rahman (Research Team of Save the Children) Endline

Trace Element Deficiencies in Heifers

Custom Rates for Colorado Farms & Ranches in 2017 Jenny Beiermann, Norman Dalsted, Jeffrey E. Tranel, R. Brent Young, and Jackie Seyler A

Alberta 4-H Bison Project Member Level One. Feeds for Bison

Fact Sheet. Feed Testing & Analysis for Beef Cattle

GCSE 4942/01 ENGLISH LANGUAGE FOUNDATION TIER UNIT 2

Dairy Australia, Mr. Ian Halliday, 60 City Road, Southbank VIC Dear Mr. Ian Halliday,

EFFECT OF SOIL SALINITY ON VETIVER GROWTH. Paul Truong The Vetiver Network International and Veticon Consulting Brisbane, Australia November 2012

Cattle Nutritional Management Analysis Using Fecal Sampling, Computer Software, and Body Condition Scoring. Triangle Cross Livestock 2004

PADDOCK DESIGN FENCING WATER SYSTEMS California Cattle Grazing School

Payback News. Capturing Value with Creep Feeding. protein, vitamins, and minerals, on pasture. When done correctly,

QUALITY GRASS MIXTURES

VETIVER PHYTOREMEDIATION TECHNOLOGY FOR TREATMENT OF SEWAGE EFFLUENT IN INDIA

Matching Hay to the Cow s Requirement Based on Forage Test

Lucerne for the Future

Custom Rates for Colorado Farms & Ranches in 2015 Jesse Russell, Norman Dalsted, Jeffrey E. Tranel, R. Brent Young, and Jackie Seyler A

THE SECRET GARDEN FRAGMENTY TEKSTU

LESSON EIGHT: Poisonous Rangeland Plants of Nebraska

DAIRY BREEDS AND FEEDING

Understanding Dairy Nutrition Terminology

Winter Feeding Based on a Forage Test MARK MAULDIN FEBRUARY 2016 NW FL BEEF CONFERENCE

INTERPRETING FORAGE QUALITY TEST REPORTS

Seed Quality & Treatment

Evaluating Feed Purchasing Options: Energy, Protein, and Mineral Supplements

Beef Cattle Handbook

STABILISATION AND REHABILITATION OF STEEP SLOPES USING VETIVER SYSTEM TECHNOLOGY

The Sustainable Cotton Crop

Coimisiún na Scrúduithe Stáit State Examinations Commission

CHAPTER 1: ANIMAL ECOLOGY AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR... 1

Cameron Smeal GELITA Australia, Beaudesert, Queensland, Australia Paul Truong Veticon Consulting, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

VETIVER SYSTEM FOR INDUSTRIAL WASTEWATER TREATMENT AND DISPOSAL AT GELITA APA, QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA

APPLICATIONS OF VETIVER IN WESTERN AFRICA:

The data was used to determine which of the relative yield of a range of cultivars.

Matching Forages to the Nutrient Needs of Meat Goats

Body Condition Scoring Your Cow Herd

The Bell Curve of Mature Buck Antler Scores: When You Manage a Buck Herd, You Manage a Bell Curve of Antler Scores By Stuart W.

What deer eat and why: A look at white-tailed deer nutrition. Mike Miller Technical Guidance Biologist Wildlife Division - District 3

Grass to Glass Amazing Dairy Cows

Stockpiling and strategic supplementation

VETIVER SYSTEM FOR BRIDGE APPROACH STABILISATION

Don t just look: observe!

A Very Specific System

there is no high fructose corn syrup in this maple

Consumer Behaviours, Attitudes & Knowledge Towards Food & Waste

S.No. Chapters Page No. 1. Plants Animals Air Activities on Air Water Our Body...

DRK-12 Carbon Assessment, Form A. Fall, 2012

RECENT ADVANCES IN ALFALFA TISSUE TESTING. Steve Orloff, Dan Putnam and Rob Wilson 1 INTRODUCTION

Caritas Jerusalem reaches out to cancer and dialysis patients from Gaza and the West Bank in Jerusalem for the holiday season

9 Managing blockcalving

Donna Deegan. Love Over Fear. By Katie Nail Staff Writer Photo Cole LoCurto

LAND & LIVESTOCK Blaine E. Horn, Ph.D., C.P.R.M. University Senior Extension Educator Rangeland & Forage Management

The Vitality HealthyFood benefit

Milk Urea Nitrogen Evaluation in Louisiana Dairy Herds

WHY SHOULD WE CARE WHAT IS HAPPENING IN CLACKAMAS COUNTY?

Beef Cattle Nutrient Requirements

Teaching Family and Friends in Your Community

Kenya Sample Itinerary

Developing a mineral program: combining the art and the science. Mary Drewnoski, Beef Systems Specialist, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Making Forage Analysis Work for You in Balancing Livestock Rations and Marketing Hay

Marianas Grazing and Livestock Management Academy Range and Pasture Management 101: Range and Pasture Animal Nutrition

Mom! You re drinking a lot lately. Are you all right? I think so. But, you re right. I seem to be thirsty all the time. And, I m tired a lot too.

The Whole Village Project. Summary of Engaruka, Migombani, Naitolia, and Selela in Monduli District

WHERE DO I FIND HIGH QUALITY FOOD?

NEW/EMERGING MEASUREMENTS FOR FORAGE QUALITY. Dan Putnam 1 ABSTRACT

The Challenges of Honeycrisp Storage: A PACKER S PERSPECTIVE

How Avocado Fruits Soften During Ripening

The DCCT Newsletter CLUB WEBSITE UP AND RUNNING

The China Study: The Most Comprehensive Study of Nutrition Ever Conducted and the. Startling Implications for Diet, Weight Loss and Long-Term Health

By: Dr. Patrick Davis, University of Missouri Extension County Livestock Specialist Jeff Yearington, Lincoln University Farm Outreach Worker West

The Ultimate Herpes Protocol Review

Cambodia Australia Agricultural Extension Project. Foot and Mouth Disease Control Technical Implementation Procedure

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TWO MEANS: THE INDEPENDENT GROUPS T-TEST

Forage Intake of Range Cows as Mfected Breed and Level of Winter Supplement

Rearing the Beef Bred Calf

Understanding Forage Intake in Range Animals

DRK-12 Carbon Assessment, Form A

4.COW FEED REQUIREMENTS

5.9 DIFLUBENZURON (130)

Potash, Magnesium & Sodium

HERE ARE SOME ANSWERS TO OUR CUSTOMERS MOST OFTEN ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT Calcium-25

Pupil s Book Grade 4

Beef Cattle Nutrient Requirements

How Do I Supplement My Livestock With Minerals? Part IV

How to Maximize Energy Content in Forage Grasses

From his landlady s attic to 50 years of research: My father s search for the objective in a field full of theory

The Seed. Watch it bloom. Thank you You planted a seed of hope in Komabangou.

Factors Affecting Food Choices. Culture Social Emotions Agriculture, Technology, Economics, Politics

NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 12

Huay Sai Royal Development Study Center, Phetchaburi Province, about 200 km south of Bangkok

ECONOMICS OF RUMEN BYPASS FAT FEEDING ON COST OF MILK PRODUCTION, FEEDING AND REALIZABLE RECEIPTS IN LACTATING JAFFRABADI BUFFALOES


SETTING THE STAGE. News in Review November 2012 Teacher Resource Guide E. COLI HEALTH HAZARD

NEWS LETTER VETIVER NETWORK MADAGASCAR

RFV VS. RFQ WHICH IS BETTER

Five Common Mistakes Made When Feeding A Horse

BUILDING ON MILK PROTEIN

Quick Notes for Users of. Beef Ration and Nutrition. Decision Software & Sheep Companion Modules

LAMINITIS & NUTRITION. Prevention & Management

Transcription:

Vetiver Saved My Herd Rafael Luque M. Vetiver Antierosión. C.A Vetiver.vzla@gmail.com For more than 15 years I have been doing bioengineering work with Vetiver (Chrysopogon zizanioides). Initially I owned a 1 ha fish pond. Later I moved to better land located in Las Majaguas, Edo, Portuguesa, Venezuela where I planted 6 ha of vetiver. After a few years, there were 18 ha of sugar cane, but for political-economical reasons, that are beside the point, I swotched to dairy ranching, designating 4 ha for other crops, and because the sugar cane had higher caloric value but less proteins, I reserved 18.5 ha for pastures and foraging crops. In working with the Pastoreo Racional Voisin (PRV) this past year during the rainy season, we sowed 8 Ha of African Star Grass (Photo 1) and divided the area with electric fences in many small pastures. Likewise we sowed a number of forage trees and fruits. At the beginning all went according to the plan (Photo 2), but unexpected sickness afflicted me and José Gregorio, my son who partners me in this project, and we were absent from the farm for 4 months. Due to the distance between the farm and my home, nobody from the family could supervise what was happening there. What came next is easy to understand for any Venezuelan rancher, and Latin Americans in general, thus I will only go into details about what happened with the facilities, the pasture, and the animals. We returned to the farm during the time of drought. After having gone around the farm, we found that all wire fencing had been unraveled and in the soil (Photos 3 and 4). The animals had entered all of the pastures as they please and had eaten the grass before it had developed. Hardly any survived except 1 ha that was eaten to the ground. In brief, there was no foliage to eat (Photos 5, 6, and 7). With virtually nothing to eat the cattle were thin (Photo 8), moreover, only 2 cows were producing milk, (about 8 liters/day). My first reaction was to sell the herd, so I put announcements in the press. However, potential buyers lost interest once they knew that the majority of the cows were dry (not producing milk). Others offered to buy them at very low prices in order to take them to the slaughter house. I then decided on a plan B: Buy concentrated food to supplement those cows that had just given birth and the thinnest, and also buy bales of Brachiaria humidicola (a grass commonly used as hay in East Venezuela) at the cost of 850 Bs (134 USD) for each bale, that hardly lasts 1 day per 33 animals. For reference, the price of 1 liter of milk was 25 Bs. Thus, it is necessary to produce 34 liters and my cows were only giving 8 liters per day. Soon I realized that financially I could not support this. By good luck, on the border of the farm grew rice, so I began to cultivate it and supply it to the animals even though the nutritional value of these young shoots of rice is very low. I observed that the cows were going to the 6 ha vetiver area frequently, but they spent little time in the other crops. I observed that the animals ate very little of the mature vetiver leaves (Photos 12 and 13). I had little hope for the vetiver, due to the presence of silica in the leaves and low palatability when mature. At this time, halfway through summer, it was almost dry. I had heard that in the Apure state, and also I had read that in Africa, the cattle eat vetivert during the summer. I visited the TVNI website (www.vetiver.org), the library of vetiver, where I found an Australian study where they compared the nutritional value of vetiver with the grasses Rhodes and Kikuyu, obtaining results at par with the other grasses (see Appendix A). To continue, I proceeded to plan C, one that was never in my mind. I burned 3 Ha of vetiver and cut the stems that remained after the fire with the objective to stimulate faster sprouting of the grass (Photo 14). After five days, the cattle began to enter the area, meanwhile, the new foreman suggested that I wait longer for it. From prior experience, I knew that the vetiver, under these conditions, has a growth rate of 3 to 5 cm/day and for that I told him: Don't worry, the vetiver will grow more quickly than the hunger of the cows. Initially, they spent little time in the fire zone (Photo 15), but as the vetiver grew, they began to spend half the day there (Photos 16, 17, and 18), and the other half of the day they were grazing in an area of trees and pastures with weeds and dry grass.

Now the rainy season has arrived, and with it we will be able to sow more appropriate grasses for the cattle. But I can say with confidence that: VETIVER SAVED MY HERD! Photos 1.- Sowing Star Grass 2.- The herd in August 2014 3.- The state of the fences at the end of January 2015 4.- Unused wires, unprotected pastures 5.- February 2015: Vetiver in the background 6.- Pasture at end of Feb. 2015 7.- In March 2015 8.- Cow eating dry grass 9.- My son, José G. preparing a bale that

Photos costs 850 Bs. 10.- Supplying the young shoots of rice 11.- Cows eating the young shoots of rice 12.- A cow eating dry vetiver grass 13.- A cow eating ripe vetiver grass 14.- Recently burned Vetiver grass 15.- A cow eating the returning Vetiver shoots

16.- Calf eating tender Vetiver shoots 17.- Cows eating unpruned Vetiver 18.- Part of the herd gracing amongst the Vetiver 19.- The bull gained weight after a few days of eating Vetiver