Instinctive Migratory Grazing
Are you curious how you can keep your cows together, decrease labor and materials, and still achieve the desired animal impact? Bob Kinford’s stockmanship techniques, used in rebooting herd instinct, make positive changes in your cattle’s behavior and stress levels.
Join us on Monday, November 4th, at 7:00 p.m. to hear Bob Kinford, Riki and Justin Kremer from Kremer Land & Livestock in Lusk, Wyoming, Fernando Falomir from Understanding Ag, and class attendee Randall Shinn from Seacross Ranch in Lodge Grass explain the process.
In most cases, holistic and regenerative grazing programs rely on electric fence to control where cattle graze in order to “mimic the action of wild, migrating, herds of herbivores.” Instinctive Migratory Grazing, or IMG for short, breaks current stockmanship, cattle behavior, and grazing paradigms on at least half a dozen levels.
Bob is the Practitioner Emeritus of Rebooting Herd Instinct and Instinctive Migratory Grazing. Josh Hoy says, “He is the finest, most skilled stockman I have ever worked with and has cowboyed on two continents, on hundreds of ranches, and with many cultures.”
It has been said that Bob has used these methods to communicate with jackrabbits, chickens, kangaroos, antelope, elk, bison, horses, cattle, and even people in Walmart!
To listen to other “Bull Sessions” or to learn more about what WSE helps ranchers transition to regenerative management, click here.