+ All Categories
Home > Business > Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Date post: 25-May-2015
Category:
Upload: carbon-coalition
View: 1,796 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Colin Seis is the name most often associated with "Pasture Cropping". This technique is revolutionising cropping and grazing operations, This presentation was given at the Carbon Farming Expo & Conference Orange 18-19 November, 2008. Orange is in new South Wales, Australia.
Popular Tags:
30
Regenerative Land Management on “Winona” Colin Seis
Transcript
Page 1: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Regenerative Land Management

on

“Winona” Colin Seis

Page 2: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

“Winona” November 2008

Page 3: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Winona in 2008• Myself and son Nick

• Situated 20 k north of Gulgong

• 840 Ha

• Granite soil, Ph 5.0-5.5, 650 ml av. rainfall

• 4000 Merino sheep (time control grazed)

• 500 acres cropped annually (Pasture Cropped)

• 55 year-old Merino Stud.

• 30 year-old Kelpie working-dog stud

Page 4: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Sowing wheat 1920s

Page 5: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Industrialised agriculture on “Winona”:

• Destroyed our grasslands • Created weeds • Became unprofitable• Destroyed our resource base – soil• Created soil erosion• Created major dry-land salinity problems• Depleted our soil carbon

THE INDUSTRIALISED EXPERIMENT FAILED!

Page 6: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

I decided to restore Winona’s native

grasslands

• In 1992

Page 7: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Why?The industrialised system was sending us broke!

The outcome was:

– Greater resilience– Increased species diversity– Improved soil health– Increased soil carbon– Enhanced ecological function

– INCREASED PROFITS

Page 8: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

How did we do this?

Page 9: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

We changed grazing management

to Time Control Grazing

and cropping management to Pasture Cropping

Page 10: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Pasture Cropping is a land management technique that

mimics the function of native grassland, where perennial and

annual species grow symbiotically and each benefits

the other

Page 11: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 12: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Pasture Cropping

Grazing and cropping are combined and managed in a way

where each one benefits the other.

Page 13: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Pasture CroppingZero till sowing of crops into perennial pasture.

• Never Never Plough.

• Never kill perennial species.

• Perennial pastures can be native or introduced.

• Weeds are managed by creating large quantities of thick litter by using correct grazing management of livestock.

Page 14: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 15: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 16: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 17: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 18: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 19: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 20: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 21: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Pasture Change on Winona since 1999

• Perennial native grass has increased from 10%-80%

• Native perennial diversity has increased from 12 to 50

species

• Weeds have decreased from 60% to 5% of the pasture

Research has shown Pasture Cropping will increase perennial grass seedling recruitment (Grain & Graze )

Page 22: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Bacteria have increased 3.5 times.

Fungi have increased 9 times

Protozoa have increased 10 times

Nematodes have increased 60 times

Increase in soil microbes (Soil food-web analysis March 2007)

Page 23: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Increase in insect numbers and diversityElise Wenden October 2007

• Insects numbers have increased by 600%

• Insect diversity has increased by 25%

Page 24: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Organic Carbon

• Pasture Cropping and the recreation of a native grassland has improved soil organic carbon.

• On Winona soil carbon levels have increased from 1.8% in 1995 to 3% - 4% in 2006.

.

Page 25: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 26: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 27: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona
Page 28: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

By increasing soil carbon and ecological function we have:

• Increased soil water-holding capacity (drought tolerance)

• Improved nutrient availability (reduce fertiliser)

• Increased plant, animal & insect diversity (resilience)

• Reduced plant disease (no fungicides)

• Reduced insect attack ( no insecticides)

• Increased soil-microbial numbers & diversity

• BECOME MORE PROFITABLE

Page 29: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

Agriculture becomes more profitable,

regenerative, restores ecological function

& restores soil carbon

When agricultural practices function closer to Nature’s

original design

Page 30: Colin Seis: Regenerative Land Management at Winona

With thanks to ...

for inspiration


Recommended