• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header left navigation
  • Skip to site footer
  • Home
  • Cowpie Commentary
  • About
    • About Troy Bishopp
    • The Grass Whisperer Story
  • Body of Work
  • Photography
    • Award Winning
    • Published
    • From My Perspective
  • Hire and Support
The Grass Whisperer

The Grass Whisperer

A Farmer’s Winter Pasture Walk

January 16, 2021 by Troy Bishopp

The challenge: It takes time to linger long enough to notice something meaningful.

A Farmer’s Winter Pasture Walk

Louis Bromfield said in his book, Out of the Earth, “A farmer can learn as much from his own land as any college of agriculture can teach him—–if he keeps his eyes open to what is going on around him when he walks the land.”  This sentiment was borne out of the Chinese proverb, “The best fertilizer of any farm is the footsteps of the owner.” 

This walking, hearing, seeing, smelling, kneeling, digging and being at one with the land has always been endorsed as a good thing by educators, conservationists, farmers themselves and my cardiologist.  The challenge:  It takes time to linger long enough to notice something meaningful.

The benefit of grazing stockpiled pasture into winter is I don’t need vehicular propulsion, just some portable fencing, my own horsepower and a camera.  Because I’m more like a tortoise than a hare, reading the environment in slower motion is really profound.  Let me embellish you on what I have noticed from my daily jaunts.  See if these experiences resonate with you also.

My fence-moving ritual is pretty habitual as I take down the poly-wire and give the cattle a fresh break of grass.  Like clockwork, this activity stimulated a pair of hawks to fly overhead and seek out food.  I sat in my friend’s tree-stand to watch.  It was something to see the stomping and chomping livestock stirring up the mini snowdrifts around the peek-a-boo orchardgrass clumps and sending a flurry of field mice into the waiting talons.  However gruesome the scene was, to me, it was how a harmonious winter grassland was supposed to act in nature.   Buffalo grazing may have been a bit more authentic.

Snow makes an excellent marker for seeing animal tracks and movement patterns.  Ever pay attention to what is crisscrossing your property and where?  The deer stay one paddock ahead of the cows and bed down in the wetland rushes, the rabbits, voles and foxes intersect in the hedgerows and I can study where they like to drink.  It’s pretty gratifying to have created these natural areas and just enjoy the scenery.

If you want to get a glimpse of winter biology get on bended knee and dig yourself a hole in the snow to the soil surface and see what’s happening.  On our place with the rested sward of plants there is a herd of earthworms still munching.  The castings are a stark reminder that if you don’t consider fodder management to feed this livestock too, your spring green-up won’t be very robust.  Frozen open winters are great for out-wintering but can take a toll on the little creatures.  It’s helpful to monitor this situation even in cold weather.

Lately I’ve been fascinated with snow whorls and drifts.  Because I’m in the water retention business among other things, I want to capture all the snow I can and pray for a slow melt to fill my aquifers.  I’m noticing subtle and slap-upside-your-head benefits of ground cover and hedgerows.  Paying attention to grass residuals, even 6 inches, doubles the snow catching ability of the land.  As much as I fight knapweed, the upright florets left from the grazing season sequester an amazing amount of blowing snow.  I’m also seeing the payback on snow catch from planting a variety of shrubs and tree heights in my hedgerows at the prodding of my conservation advocates.

One thing that keeps puzzling me is why I’m still seeing Bluebirds into early winter.  Are my planted American Cranberry hedgerow crop, extended grazing strategies and many bird boxes keeping them here longer?  Have I created a micro-climate that signals it’s ok to stay?  Is it global warming?  They are a good marker for how good your grass management is, so I intend to keep monitoring.

So, I notice things and I linger.  It’s the luxury of owning a farm that many wish they had.  When I do my winter stroll, the thing that is most pleasing is capturing the scenes on my digital camera.  There is not a day that goes by that something is not picture worthy.  And when I forget the camera, it seems I always miss the best shots.

While hoofing up the hill has its advantages to the senses and getting your heart rate going, it’s also beneficial to bring a sled and enjoy a different form of transportation on the way back.  In keeping with childhood traditions, snow drifts can take on a whole other meaning.  Righteous air dude!

Thanks for reading.  GW

Category: FarmingTag: grass farmer, Linger grazing, Pasture walk, winter grazing

About Troy Bishopp

Troy Bishopp, affectionately known as “The Grass Whisperer”, is a 35 year well-seasoned grass farmer, a grasslands advocate, and a voice for grassfed livestock producers to the media, consumers, restaurateurs and policy-makers. Troy owns and manages Bishopp Family Farm in Deansboro, NY with his understanding wife, daughters, grandchildren and parents. In addition to farming, Bishopp takes this passion and work ethic to the Madison County Soil and Water Conservation District and the Upper Susquehanna Coalition and directs grazing assistance and practical holistic land management concepts to hundreds of area farmers. He’s also a professional speaker and a free-lance writer/photographer for Lee Newspapers, OnPasture.com, and other regional and national media outlets.

Previous Post: « The Old Corn Crib
Next Post: Chilly Hope »

Sidebar

Latest posts from Troy Bishopp

  • Register for our Field to Heal Webinar
  • Fencing from the Beach
  • Bale Grazing: Another Tool in the Box
  • Mittens: The Devine Thread
  • A new column in Lancaster Farming

Support with PayPal

Archives

  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • February 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • July 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • December 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • April 2022
  • February 2022
  • December 2021
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020

Categories

  • Farming
  • Foodie
  • Ponderings
  • Uncategorized

Recent Comments

  • John Marble on Sunset Transformation is Hard
Contact The Grass Whisperer with inquiries about writing assignments, speaking engagements, outreach help, fence construction/farm logistics Instruction, or on-farm consultations.
Let’s work together!

Connect on LinkedIn.

Site Navigation

Home

Read Cowpie Commentary

About Troy Bishopp

Contact the Grass Whisperer

Social

Follow along with the Grass Whisperer on Instagram and YouTube:

Linger Grazing.

© Copyright 2020 Deep Roots Branding

Return to top