The first year we had animals on pasture, we ran them in one big open field and wondered why the grass kept dying. Classic overgrazing mistake. By year two, we had split the property into paddocks and added poultry behind the cattle โ€” and the pasture transformed. Here's everything we know now that we wish we'd known then.

Why Rotational Grazing Matters

Continuous grazing lets animals selectively overgraze their favorite plants while ignoring others. Grasses need recovery time โ€” typically 30โ€“90 days depending on season and rainfall โ€” to rebuild root systems and carbohydrate reserves. Rotational grazing gives them that time while concentrating manure impact beneficially.

On our 20-acre property, with 80% woodland and 20% open pasture (roughly 4 acres of grazeable ground), intelligent rotation is the only way to support the number and variety of animals we keep without destroying the land.

๐Ÿพ Our Livestock Mix

Goats ยท Cattle ยท Heritage Pigs ยท Chickens ยท Ducks ยท Guinea Hens ยท Rabbits โ€” plus Livestock Guardian Dogs and barn cats for protection and pest control.

Paddock Design for Multiple Species

We run a three-paddock rotation on our main pasture block. Each paddock is roughly 1.2โ€“1.5 acres and fenced with high-tensile electric wire. The design allows us to:

  • Move cattle and goats through on a 7โ€“10 day rotation during peak growing season
  • Follow cattle with chickens and guinea hens 3โ€“5 days later (they scratch through manure, eat fly larvae, and add their own fertility)
  • Give each paddock 60โ€“80 days of rest before the rotation returns

Pigs get their own dedicated paddock system with electric netting. They root aggressively, which can damage permanent fencing and destroy a paddock if left too long. We move them every 2โ€“3 days in a tight rotation, and the rootings actually help break up compacted soil layers.

Managing Multiple Species Together

Different animals are physiological complements. Cattle and horses graze grasses. Goats browse brush and weeds that cattle ignore โ€” they're incredibly useful for keeping fence lines and woodland edges cleared. Pigs work the soil. Chickens are the cleanup crew and parasite breakers: their digestive acids kill cattle and goat parasite larvae.

SpeciesGrazing StyleRotation RoleRest Needed
CattleGrass, top third of plantsFirst movers60โ€“90 days
GoatsBrowse, weeds, brushAfter cattle30โ€“60 days
PigsRoots, grubs, soilSeparate paddocks60โ€“90 days to recover
Chickens/PoultryInsects, seeds, manure larvaeLast movers (parasite break)10โ€“14 days

Reading Your Forage

The single most important skill in rotational grazing is knowing when to move animals. Move too early and you're underutilizing the paddock. Move too late and you're overgrazing. We use a simple rule: move when the average pasture height drops to 3โ€“4 inches for cattle, 6โ€“8 inches for goats.

In spring and early summer, we might move every 5โ€“7 days. In late summer drought, every 3โ€“4 days. Animals will tell you when it's time โ€” they start pacing fences, vocalizing, and reaching through to the next paddock.

Forage Species We Cultivate

  • Perennial grasses: Orchard grass, tall fescue, bermudagrass โ€” the backbone of the system
  • Legumes: Red and white clover, lespedeza โ€” nitrogen fixation and high-protein browse for goats
  • Forbs: Chicory, plantain, yarrow โ€” deep-rooted mineral accumulators and natural dewormers
  • Woodland edge: Multiflora rose (we manage it), blackberries, brush โ€” excellent goat browse

Fencing and Water Infrastructure

Getting the infrastructure right is the most expensive part of a rotational system, but it pays back every season. Our setup:

  • Perimeter fence: Woven wire with one hot wire on top โ€” keeps cattle and goats in, predators out
  • Interior paddock fencing: 3-strand high-tensile electric โ€” quick to install, easy to adjust
  • Temporary pig fencing: Electric netting (Premier 1 PoultryNet style) โ€” move every few days
  • Water system: Frost-free hydrants at paddock intersections so every paddock has water access without moving tanks
๐Ÿ’ก Our Biggest Infrastructure Lesson

Invest in permanent water infrastructure first. Hauling water to paddocks by hand will burn you out within one season. A hydrant at each paddock corner is worth every penny.

Livestock Guardian Dogs: Non-Negotiable

We run Anatolian Shepherds with our goats and cattle. On a property surrounded by woodland, predator pressure is constant โ€” coyotes, raccoons, foxes, and the occasional wandering dog. Since adding our LGDs, we have not lost a single animal to predation.

LGDs are not farm dogs in the traditional sense. They live with the animals 24/7, bond to the herd, and patrol the perimeter constantly. They also bark โ€” loudly, at night โ€” which is simply the cost of having free-range livestock in a wooded area. Our neighbors understand, and we make sure they do.

Results After Two Full Seasons

The pasture transformation has been remarkable. Our soil organic matter has measurably increased. Bare patches that we had in year one no longer exist. The diversity of plant species has expanded. We went from a monoculture of tired fescue to a diverse sward of grasses, legumes, and forbs. The animals are healthier, with lower parasite loads across the board.

Perhaps most importantly: we're running more animals on the same acreage than we did year one, and the land looks better than when we started. That's the goal of any regenerative system.