NZ Lifestyle Block

The Good Life

Growing good quantities of quality grass doesn’t take a science degree or a large investment, but it does require care and common sense. Sheryn looks at the lessons she’s learned about growing grass.

- Words & images Sheryn Dean

5 important things to know about growing grass

Growing grass isn’t as complicate­d as I once thought. I have talked to fertiliser salespeopl­e who push their products but often can’t justify why I need them. I’ve read books and attended pasture seminars.

I’ve tried to understand the interactio­ns and complexity of the elements. Have a look at the Mulder’s chart on page 54 and see if you can make sense of it.

I’ve concluded that growing grass is rather simple. All you need to do is get outside, look at your grass, note how it grows, and how your animals eat it.

LESSON 1: remember the nutrient cycle

If you continuous­ly take fruit from a tree or graze livestock on pasture, you need to ensure an equal amount of nutrients are returned to the soil. You can’t continuall­y take from the land without giving something back or lowering soil and pasture quality.

One of the easiest ways to add nutrients to pasture is to buy in quality feed for your stock. They digest it, partially ‘compost’ it, spread it around the paddock, and grow meat, at the same time.

If you cut and sell hay or silage, you are selling nutrients off your land.

LESSON 2: nitrogen, but not as you know it

Nitrogen is one of the critical components of grass growth. It’s also free and all around us; air is 78 percent nitrogen, so all you need to do is ‘harvest’ nitrogen from the very air we breathe.

So why do farmers use urea (nitrogen fertiliser) instead, and why the big concerns about leaching?

Plants are unable to take up nitrogen. It needs to be converted into nitrates before they can use it. Humans worked out how to do this and created urea, which gives plant growth an instant boost.

Unfortunat­ely, urea isn’t stable in soil, so it leaches out when it rains, accumulati­ng in waterways.

There is a natural process that turns nitrogen from the air into nitrates – microbial action. Microbes hold the nitrogen in a stable form until the plant requires it.

Rather than spending a lot of money

Rather than spending a lot of money on fertiliser, it makes a lot more sense to nurture soil microbes.

and time applying fertiliser to your land, it makes a lot more sense to nurture these microbes and let them do the work for you. See page 56 for more details.

LESSON 3: lime

Mulder’s chart shows there are a LOT of chemical interactio­ns, but soil pH is the easiest to understand. The acid-alkaline balance of your soil affects most other elements. Too acidic and these elements become ‘locked up’ and unavailabl­e to your plants. It’s rare for NZ soils to be too alkaline.

Lime ‘sweetens’ the soil (makes it more alkaline). You can send soil samples to a lab for an $80 basic test, or you can buy a $30 testing kit from a garden centre to find out your pH.

Tip: don’t buy a pH probe, I’ve found them useless.

The ideal pH for ryegrass and clover is around 6.0, or slightly acidic (neutral is 7.0). Soil with a pH under 5.8 will benefit from the addition of lime.

You need to apply a decent amount, depending on your soil type and the quality of the lime. It can take a ton of lime per hectare to raise the pH 0.1 point (ie, from 5.8 to 5.9) so be liberal.

You can buy lime in one-ton bags from a fertiliser company. Bring it home on the trailer (or get them to deliver it) and throw it out by hand or hire a towable fertiliser spreader. Alternativ­ely, you can pay a contractor to supply and spread it for you.

I don’t hold with the theory that lime needs to be applied annually. If a test shows your soil pH is low, bringing it up into the ideal range creates the right environmen­t for

grass growth and soil life. Once it’s there, it should be stable, unless you are applying fertiliser­s which acidify the soil again.

LESSON 4: trace elements

All the microbes in the world can’t magic something from nothing; if your soil is lacking an essential element, you need to supply it.

There are a lot of trace minerals, and testing for them is expensive. Not all of them are essential for grass growth but may be crucial to livestock (and you, if you eat the meat). Trying to establish what is missing and how to apply it is complicate­d and often unnecessar­y. You can assume a few are lacking, such as the following, and apply a general supplement.

Selenium

Most New Zealand soils are low in selenium. Grass doesn’t need selenium, but your animals do. If you are eating your animals, it benefits you too.

Cobalt

This is known to be lacking in the volcanic ash soils of the central North Island and the granite soils of north-west Nelson. It may be lacking in other areas and soils – a good local vet will know. Animals convert cobalt into B12.

Boron

This is another micronutri­ent commonly lacking in New Zealand. Again, it’s not necessary for grass growth, but it is essential for other crops, especially fruit trees.

If you are buying lime from a fertiliser company, you can get any of the these mixed through it – the extra cost is minimal.

There are a lot of other minerals, vitamins, electrolyt­es, and trace elements which will probably benefit your soil. These elements get leached into the waterways and eventually out to sea where they are taken up by fish and seaweed.

Applying seaweed or fish fertiliser is an easy way to provide a balanced and comprehens­ive range of nutrients. It can be as simple as buying a ready-made extract to spray on pasture. You could forage seaweed off the beach (or buy it dehydrated) and make a seaweed tea (the same way you make compost tea). You can

All the microbes in the world can’t magic something from nothing. If your soil is lacking an essential element, you need to supply it.

also offer dried seaweed (or seaweed meal) to your stock to eat.

LESSON 5: take care of microbes

If you think your pasture is lacking soil microbes from previous bad management, you can seed good microbes by adding a good quality compost or compost tea.

Soil microbes, given the right conditions, will eventually repopulate themselves.

How to nurture microbes

If soil pH is around 6.0 and nutrients are available, microbes and the other organisms will convert manure and decaying organic matter into food that helps grass growth. All you need to do is nurture them.

Microbes are living organisms. They need air, moisture, warmth, food, and a safe environmen­t to survive and flourish.

How to feed microbes

Microbes feed on the carbon and proteins of decaying matter, and the sugars they get from the plants. Adding compost and fallowing your pasture (leaving pasture plants to grow, un-grazed for up to a year) are two easy ways to provide organic matter, and quickly boost your microbial population.

Growing more, and larger, plants to provide more roots for them to feed on maintains a high population of microbes.

Microbes do best if they can access a diverse range of plants. Different species of grasses and trees provide different roots which exploit different spaces within the soil, offering a variety of food options for different microbes. Your stock will also appreciate a diverse range of grasses and shade trees.

Microbes form a symbiotic relationsh­ip with the roots. The more roots you have, the more microbes you have. The more leaf area you have, the more roots you have. Longer grass has more roots and supports more microbes than short grass.

Only graze the top half of pasture, which leaves a lot of leaf area to continue photosynth­esis. You won’t be wasting this grass: it will re-grow more quickly than pasture grazed lower, thanks to the extra leaf area for photosynth­esis and additional microbes on its abundant roots.

Top ungrazed weeds with a mower (set high) to help them break down, and to ensure they don’t flourish and dominate your pasture.

Microbes do best if they can access a diverse range of plants. Stock love the variety too.

Give microbes the right environmen­t

We are trying to grow grass to feed our stock, but that’s not necessaril­y the original purpose of that patch of soil, which once may have supported native forest or wetland.

If we want the microbes that sustain and feed grass, we must provide the right environmen­t for those microbes:

• not too wet;

• not too dry;

• warm (above 10°C);

• not compacted or waterlogge­d.

 ??  ?? Livestock and soil microbes like a diverse range of pasture plants.
Livestock and soil microbes like a diverse range of pasture plants.
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 ??  ?? ABOVE: Fallowing your pasture, allowing it to grow long and go to seed, adds organic matter to the soil.
LEFT: Plant a wide range of pasture plants, not just ryegrass and clover.
ABOVE: Fallowing your pasture, allowing it to grow long and go to seed, adds organic matter to the soil. LEFT: Plant a wide range of pasture plants, not just ryegrass and clover.
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