Showing posts with label grass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label grass. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 October 2025

Integrating sheep onto vineyards



Sheep are gaining popularity as mowers of grasslands in the US and beyond. Two vineyards in Ireland have just acquired Quessant sheep to manage vegetation. The benefits are many. Less fuel fumes in the vineyard from mechanical mowing equipment, a constantly coifed surface that may compete less with the vines, and of course sheep droppings return nutrients to the soil. Of course, it will affect the terroir, perhaps favourably. 

New Zealand has been doing it for some time. With 27M sheep and 37K hectares of vines, it was inevitable to converge, especially if there were benefits both ways, and there are. NZ has studied the results and quantified the benefits. The financial benefits are substantial from the reduction of herbicides alone. 

I love the way agriculture is heading. The practice is just beginning in the US, but there is hope that more care of the earth and better ecological practices will help the earth and the farmer. 

Tuesday, 26 December 2017

Clearing the grass

Croagh Patrick, the Holy Mountain
The weather was beautiful today so we took a walk to the summit of our land to see the views, plant a few more trees and enjoy the St. Stephen's Day holiday. The views were stunning but the land is very wet. The trees we have been planting out on about 1/3 of our ten acres are doing very nicely. The leader species - birch, willow, and alder - are growing vigorously. The ash and sycamores are coming along nicely too, but at a slower pace.