Community pasture mixing tradition and science to help beef farmers - Action News
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New Brunswick

Community pasture mixing tradition and science to help beef farmers

Community pasture proponents study carbon storing and rotational grazing while ensuring beef farmers have access to grazing lands, freeing up space to grow hay and other forage crops.

70 farmers use New Brunswick's six community pastures for about 2500 head of cattle

Matt Beal is the manager of the Tantramar Grasslands Co-operative outside Sackville. His family has been involved since the inception of the community pasture in 1965. (Tori Weldon/CBC)

Matt Beal has a family, a farm and a full-time job, so in what little spare time he has, he volunteers as the manager of the Tantramar Grasslands Co-operative Limited, looking after an 1800 acre community pasture just outside of Sackville.

The Beal family has been involved for four generations, doing their part to further the beef industry in New Brunswick.

"My great grandfather Reg was one of the founding board members." said Beal.

"Since then my grandfather has been involved, my mum and dad have been involved and now I've been involved.I've been kind of working on the pasture since I was nine or ten years old."

Decades-old community pasture uses science to stay modern

3 years ago
Duration 3:40
Tantramar Community Pasture, formed as a land co-op in the 1960s, moves into the modern age with climate-change initiatives.

Beal knows the importance of supporting farmers, andhe sees science as a way of doingthat.

Thepasture gives farmers affordable grazing space, freeing uptheir own land to grow hay andother forage crops.

"Without a place like this, they wouldn't be able to carry the capacity of animals that they have. And with the shortage of animals that we already have in the Maritimes, places like this that have been deemed very important," said Beal.

But rather than just coast along doing thingsthe way they've always been done, Beal is looking for ways to improve the pasture, which in turn is good for the industry.

"If you want to show growing capacity and show growthwe need to kind of adopt some of themethods that science has told us that that are going to help," he said.

Zoshia Fraser, assistant general manager of the New Brunswick Soil and Crop Improvement Association, helps the province's farmers to be as sustainable and profitable as possible through agricultural research and demonstration projects, as well as the promotion and development of new technologies. (Tori Weldon/CBC)

One of those methods is rotational grazing.

Zoshia Fraser,assistant general manager of the New Brunswick Soil and Crop Improvement Association, approached Beal with the idea.Using grant money to install fences, the pasture was broken up into paddocks to move away from a continuous grazing system.

"In that system, the cows have the chance to pick and choose which grasses they want to eat. So if you have a grass that's really, really tasty and really good for the cow, they go back and they eat that grass over and over again until that grass dies," said Fraser.

With rotational grazing, thecows are moved from one field to the next over the season.

The Tantramar Grasslands Co-operative is made up of about 1800 acres of land on the Tantramar Marsh. There are six community pastures in the province used by about 70 farmers, pasturing 2,500 head of cattle. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

"Then you get to keep that grass in your pasture for longer, which improves the pasture's yield, but also the cattle yield that you're getting off your pasture."

According to Fraser, allowing the grassesto thrive is also good for the environment.

"As those plants are able to create more roots, we get an increase in soil carbon and that's carbon that used to be in the atmosphere that is now safely stored in the soil. We call that carbon sequestration."

Fraser said the amount of carbon a well managed pasture can hold is still being studied, and the Tantramar Community Pasture is part of that research.

She hopes science can help improve the beef industry's reputation when it comes to climate change, "where cows are driving carbon sequestration instead of carbon emissions.I think that's a really important message that the public needs to know."

There are six community pastures in the province used by about 70 farmers, pasturing 2,500 head of cattle. The land belongs to the Department of Agriculture, Aquaculture and Fisheries and is leased topasture co-ops, whichallow farmers to pasture their cattle for a fee.