| August 17, 2004:
Dairyman David Iles used to think that if his herd’s milk
flow decreased even a little bit, he would go bankrupt. For a decade
the third-generation farmer worked hard to produce lots of milk.
But he gradually came to the realization that the maximum-production
philosophy of the American dairy industry was getting him nowhere.
Eleven years after the North Carolina dairyman switched to become
a learner of how to manage a herd on intensively managed pasture,
he’s much happier. "I wouldn’t go back to conventional
dairying under any circumstance.” He’s found his new
system is more profitable even though it’s less demanding
in terms of capital, labor and time.
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Farm
- at - a - Glance

Acreage: 360 total acres
Grazing on 160 acres; Small grains for winter grazing:
80 acres
Location: Littleton, NC, just south
of the Virginia about an hour and 45 minutes north of
Raleigh.
Production methods: 190 pasture raised
cattle. Iles' goal is to graze the cattle every day
of the year. Pastures are fungus-free fescue, bluegrass
and clover. A few of them are orchardgrass, bluegrass
and clover, cattle are supplemented with six to seven
pounds of protein a day. |
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“From 1983 to 1993 we averaged a half million dollars a year
with a 19,000-pound herd average,” says Iles. “Yet at
the end of that time, we were just as deep in debt as we were at
the beginning. It didn’t make any sense to keep going in that
direction.”
An innovator who knew he had to cut production costs, Iles transitioned
in 1993 to a pasture-based program. “Since then, we have seen
better herd health, lower cost of production, less need for borrowed
money, and our average profits have stayed the same or increased,”
he says.
“That doesn’t mean each cow giving all the milk it
can possibly give,” Iles explains. “We’ve turned
away from that. Now, I would rather have two cows milking 50 pounds
a day than one milking 100 pounds a day.” He runs a 190-cow
dairy herd near Littleton, in the north-eastern part of the state
just below the Virginia line.
Five years into his grass-based system, a consortium of schools
and state agencies founded an innovative ag research facility in
Goldsboro. The Center for Environmental Farming Systems (CEFS) is
dedicated to the development of farming systems that are environmentally,
economically, and socially sustainable. The center launched its
Pasture-Based Dairy Unit in 1998, and has been closely monitoring
two 40-head herds since 2001.
Going for the net
The core of Iles’ system is figuring out ways not to buy
things. “We are making money by not spending money. We are
not increasing our gross [farm income], but we are increasing our
net.” And it’s what left over that really counts.
His primary focus is to nurture high-quality pastures. “We
started with orchardgrass, alfalfa and clover, but that mixture
didn’t survive dry weather very well,” he says. “Now
most of our pastures are fungus-free fescue, bluegrass and clover.
A few of them are orchardgrass, bluegrass and clover.”
He feeds silage when lack of rain reduces pasture potential, ensiling
sorghum-Sudangrass, soybeans or pasture clippings in trench silos.
“We used to keep some corn silage, but we left it because
it was simply too expensive for us.”
He still feeds some grain, delivering it efficiently via a mixer/grinder
to the cattle on a drive-through concrete feed floor with feeding
racks on both sides. “We think we need to feed six to seven
pounds of protein a day, and we estimate the energy needs based
on our own observation,” he says. “We buy the grain,
mostly shell corn and hominy – a high-energy, high-starch
ration. Most of the time we will be feeding 10 to 12 pounds of grain
during warm weather and 20 to 22 pounds in the winter.”
He has increased grain feeding in the past year because he added
a 65-cow herd to his own 125 milk cows. “The price of milk
now will support that,” he notes. “We wouldn’t
be doing this if our price was still low.”
Cows selected for grass
His herd has a very mixed-breed look. “It is a proper herd
of mongrels. We started crossbreeding in 1993 when we had an all-Holstein
herd,” Iles says. “Most of the cows we’ve brought
in since the have been Jerseys, with a few Ayrshires and a few Brown
Swiss. In just a few instances we have used Dutch Belted.”
When you look at his herd now, you see reds, blacks, browns, a
few obvious Holsteins and a very few purebred Jerseys. “The
Jersey is a great breed, but it tends to be a little small for our
facilities,” says Iles. “We like crossbreds, especially
the Jersey-Holstein cross. It’s smaller than a Holstein, a
little bigger than a Jersey, and a better grazer than the Holstein.
Grazier (GRAY-zhiee-r)= a farmer
whose animals graze
Grazer = GRAY-zer an animal that grazes
He’s building herd genetics that work on his grass-based
system. “We have a herd that we have created to do what we
want it to do – have good herd health, breed back on time,
maintain a low culling rate, utilize forages and maximize the resources
of the farm.” Iles tries to maintain a replacement rate of
40 percent or more, and keep his cull rate below 25 percent. This
means he has heifers for internal growth, for sale, or both.
Iles thinks production-focused conventional dairy breeders are
skewing genetic traits in Holsteins, making them into a “dysfunctional
breed. “The culling rate is constantly increasing, because
they are essentially breeding for a cow that will not breed back.
They are breeding these cows to neglect their physical needs, and
reproduction is the first thing to go.”
Healthier cows milking at a lower rate will stay in the herd longer,
he thinks. His herd milks about 12,000 pounds per cow per year,
compared to 18,000 to 19,000 pound averages for all NC herds in
the DHIA program. He hopes to improve longevity, but his cows already
produce for one more (three to four) lactation than the state’s
average (two to three), he says.
Odor-free dairy keeps neighbors happy
Iles’ farm has been in his family since his grandfather
bought it in 1888. His father began the dairy in 1931 and built
the milking parlor that Iles still uses in 1939. Now in his sixties,
Iles looks back with some wonder at a lifetime in dairying.
There was one totally unexpected benefit of converting to a pasture-based
program, Iles found out. “A grazing dairy has no smell,”
he says. “We can exist next to residential neighbors and get
along fine. In fact, they say they enjoy the sight of the cattle
in the pastures.”
But potentially the biggest benefit of this program, Iles thinks,
is the relatively low level of up-front capital required. “Pasture-based
dairying is the only segment of agriculture now in which a small
farm unit can produce an agricultural commodity more efficiently
than the factory farm,” says Iles. “It gives a young
person the opportunity to enter the milking business without incurring
huge expenses.”
Chris Bickers is a freelance writer-photographer in Raleigh,
NC.
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