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Understanding Pasture Rent - Factors and Considerations

Understanding Pasture Rent - Factors and Considerations


What is a pasture worth? A pasture is like a house, crop field, or anything else being rented, and is worth what someone is willing to pay. The price we can charge for land rental is directly related to demand.

If we do not have competition for land, then we will be unable to get top dollar. Some parcels do not have a great deal of livestock producers living nearby. If a farmer must travel great distances to care for livestock, the property is obviously worth less to them.

On the other hand, if we have many neighbors who would benefit from the extra ground, the land becomes more valuable. To coin a real estate phrase, “location, location, location.”

Another factor influencing pasture rental rate is topography. Is the pasture flat and machinery accessible? Pastures which are covered with scrub brush, are steep, rocky, and partially inaccessible to farm machinery are not as desirable. In other words, pastures and land are not all created equal in terms of suitability for livestock production.

Pasture field size makes a difference, larger pastures can be worth more since they have a larger livestock carrying capacity. For example, a ten-acre pasture in southeastern Ohio with an annual production of 2.5 tons per acre of forage dry matter would yield 25 tons annually or 50,000 lbs. of forage.

If the pasture is one big square with no cross fencing or rotational grazing system developed, then approximately one half of this annual forage dry matter production would be available, or 25,000 pounds. A 1,300 lb. cow eating 2.5% of her body weight per day in forage dry matter, over the course of a year, would need 11,863 lbs. of forage dry matter.

This means that ten acres could not handle very many cows annually without an improved grazing system or supplementation. Therefore, size makes a difference. It is not desirable for most livestock producers to carry two-three cows per farm at several locations. Conversely, a large farm with paddocks developed, good water distribution, fencing, and livestock working facilities is worth much more.

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