Pasture Tips to Control Weeds

The key to avoid having weeds overtake your horse pastures is to make your pastures as competitive as possible for grass–a healthy stand of grass will go a long way toward out competing the weeds. Here are six important things you can do to avoid weeds.
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Use a harrow to drag your pasture.
Use a harrow to drag your pasture. Harrowing breaks up manure piles so that grass plants aren’t smothered and so plants can better use the nutrients and organic materials–and become healthier to out compete weeds. | Photo: Alayne Blickle

The key to avoid having weeds overtake your horse pastures is to make your pastures as competitive as possible for grass–a healthy stand of grass will go a long way toward out competing the weeds. Here are six important things you can do to avoid weeds.

1) Don’t allow your pastures to be stressed by overgrazing. When pastures get down to 3 to 4 inches, remove horses from the pasture. Avoid bare spots. An open area of soil is an invitation to weeds–many weed seeds can lay dormant for up to 50 years just waiting for the right conditions to happen. Not overgrazing ensures that grass will have enough reserves left after grazing to permit rapid regrowth. Put horses back on pastures when the grass has re-grown to about six to eight inches.

2) Regular mowing of your pastures will help discourage many weeds (most can’t withstand mowing) and make your grasses healthier. Once horses are done grazing an area, set your mower to six inches and mow away. Horses are selective grazers, eating some plants close to the ground and leaving others untouched. Mowing evens the playing field by cutting the tall plants down to a size where they are more tasty for the horse and encouraging grass plants to produce more leaves, called tillers, thereby making pastures thicker.

3) Harrow (or drag) the pasture to spread manure. Harrowing breaks up manure piles so that grass plants aren’t smothered and so plants can better use the nutrients and organic materials–and become healthier to out compete weeds. Pull a harrow with a tractor, riding lawn mower, ATV or a small 4WD vehicle. Or, simply take a manure fork and spread manure by hand.  A wide variety of harrows can be purchased from farm and tractor supply stores. A basic harrow can also be simply made from a discarded piece of chain-link fence with a couple of old tires tied down for weight works well. An old, metal bedspring, metal gate or similar item may also work

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Written by:

Alayne Blickle, a lifelong equestrian and ranch riding competitor, is the creator/director of Horses for Clean Water, an award-winning, internationally acclaimed environmental education program for horse owners. Well-known for her enthusiastic, down-to-earth approach, Blickle is an educator and photojournalist who has worked with horse and livestock owners since 1990 teaching manure composting, pasture management, mud and dust control, water conservation, chemical use reduction, firewise, and wildlife enhancement. She teaches and travels North America and writes for horse publications. Blickle and her husband raise and train their mustangs and quarter horses at their eco-sensitive guest ranch, Sweet Pepper Ranch, in sunny Nampa, Idaho.

3 Responses

  1. re: Pasture Tips to Control Weeds

    I read in a previous article that harrowing (dragging) a pasture to spread manure is not recommended because it will spread the parasites along with it.  Should you, or should you not Harrow pastures?  

  2. re: Pasture Tips to Control Weeds

    I rotate sheep and goats through my pastures, and cattle if I can.  It cleans up a lot of the weeds, and adds fertilizer without increasing the parasite problem.

  3. re: Pasture Tips to Control Weeds

    I’ve been really diligent mowing my fields this year to keep the weeds at bay and the results have been phenomenal.   I set the wheels high and the grass is thriving like I’ve never seen.  I also had the local farmer do a pass with fertilizer

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