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Introduction
Pastures that have good quality plants will provide the best grazing for horses, and will provide good ground cover, which will help protect the soil from erosion.
Without good pasture management, most pastures tend to deteriorate over time and become weedy where horses are grazed.
Weedy pastures provide relatively poor feed for horses. Weeds can also present risks because some weeds (e.g. Salvation Jane) are toxic to horses. Weedy pastures also
tend to die off quickly in spring and don't leave much ground cover through summer-autumn. Bare patches in grazing paddocks can increase the risk of horses getting sand colic.
Good quality pastures for horse grazing should ideally consist of:
Legumes
Example of legume plants in pastures are subclover, medic, and lucerne. Legumes get nitrogen from the air by 'fixing' nitrogen in special nodules in their roots. Legumes growing in pastures help maintain good nitrogen in the soil, so less nitrogen fertiliser needs to be applied. Legumes in pastures also provide nutritious feed for grazing animals. Steps to achieve best practice
The following steps are suggested:-
Step 1
Identify the amount of desirable pasture plants and weeds present in your pastures.
You can get assistance for pasture species identification and pasture management from
rural consultants and advisers (see links).
If your pastures have reasonable numbers of desirable pasture plants, but there is room for improvement, good pasture management
may be enough to get the right pasture composition, i.e. providing adequate soil fertility and correct grazing management - see steps 2 and 3.
If your pastures are mainly weeds and/or annual species, you will probably have to consider re-seeding pastures (step 4) as well as steps 2 and 3.
Step 2
Assess soil fertility and soil pH levels. Desirable pasture plants need reasonably good soil fertility levels as well as a soil pH that is not strongly acidic.
Step 3
Make sure that pastures are grazed evenly and not overgrazed. If pastures are overgrazed or bare patches develop, this makes it easy for weeds to proliferate.
Step 4
Consider re-seeding pastures with recommended pasture seed mixes. You can get assistance for choosing pasture
seed mixes to best suit your property, and pasture sowing and management advice from rural consultants and advisers (see links).
Try to include perennial pasture species and legume species that are suited to your area.
In the Mount Lofty Ranges, for example, species that can be considered include phalaris, cocksfoot, kikuyu and perennial rye grass combined
with a sub-clover. Within these species, there are different varieties suited to particular rainfall zones and soil types. It is recommended to
resow pastures with 20 perennial pasture grass plants per square metre plus 60 subclover plants per square metre.
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Best Practice
All grazing areas have quality pasture grasses and legumes with less than 10% weed species and no proclaimed pest plants. Rotational grazing is easier if there are smaller paddocks on the property rather than a few large paddocks. Consider re-seeding pastures with recommended pasture seed mixes. Links
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