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Grazing Management - Techniques for Reducing Intensity of Use by Influencing Distribution

 

Off-stream (alternate) water:

Key Points

1. There are many techniques which might be implemented to influence livestock use of riparian areas. Which ones are most likely to apply in a given situation will depend on the riparian area, the specific operation, and the desired objectives.

2. Application of these principles requires knowledge of the characteristics and conditions of your riparian areas, animal behavior, and plant responses to grazing and browsing.

In addition to selecting the appropriate season or seasons of use, there are other techniques to encourage livestock to move out of the riparian area. Of these, the single most important may be the development of off-stream (alternate) water. The appeal to livestock of off-stream water sources includes improved water quality and better footing. Proper location of water tanks can entice cattle up fairly steep hills as long as forage is available, as shown in Figure 3-8.

Developing water away from the riparian area may include running pipelines from the stream itself, fencing out and developing seeps and springs with pipes leading to troughs, and installation of windmills or solar pumps. Technological improvements have significantly reduced the cost of such developments. For example, the heavy duty ("bust-proof") synthetic pipe in Figure 3-9 has been laid above the ground to provide water to several tanks in a grazing operation in southwest Montana.

Troughs dug into hillsides and covered with dirt can provide water when the air temperature is well below freezing. Insulated water tanks can be especially valuable for livestock wintering on open range. In Figure 3-10, access to the water is located on the other side of the dirt mound covering the water trough.

Figure 3-8
In addition to the trough in the foreground, another on the hill in the upper center of this photo has drawn cattle away from the riparian area.


Figure 3-9
This pipe feeds a tank several hundred yards from the creek.

Figure 3-10
Water is gravity-fed to this trough from underground tanks at the top of the hill.