Skip to main content

Holistic management - part 2: four key insights

The book Holistic Management: A New Framework for Decision Making (affiliate link) introduces four key insights that underpin the concept of Holistic Management.  (See my introduction to Holistic Management here)

1) The Whole is Greater that the Sum of the Parts
Hence the reason for the word "holistic".  Every landscape is part of a broader ecosystem.  If we make a small change on our property, say clearing trees or building a dam, it will have an impact on the wider system.  Every action we take, we must consider the holistic effect.  Later in the book, there is a chapter on forming a holistic goal for your farm, so that you can ensure that everything you do moves you towards the holistic outcome that you want, and doesn't do unexpected damage.


eight acres: holistic management - four key insights


2) Brittle vs Non-brittle Landscapes
Landscapes respond to influences depending on where they sit on a brittleness scale.  Non-brittle landscapes have frequent rainfall, a fairly constant growing season and constant decay of biomass.  Brittle landscapes, on the other hand, have infrequent rainfall (it can be relatively a lot of rain, but only at certain times of year), a particular/short growing season and decay only occurs when conditions are humid, otherwise biomass tends to oxidise.  See more about brittleness here.

I found this concept made sense to me as soon as I heard it.  I grew up in a non-brittle landscape (New Zealand), which has rain all year round, and constant decay was obvious to me (i.e. mould in student flats).  Coming to Australia I knew that something felt different, but I thought it was just the warmer sub-tropical climate.  Actually, the further you go from the coast, the more brittle the landscape becomes. In our current location we get most of our rain in summer, it can be 200-300 mm, but in winter and spring we may get no rain for several weeks.  The grass will dry out and go brown or grey (oxidised) and we will find fossilised cow manure completely undecayed.  I think when you've experiences both types of landscape first-hand its easy to see the difference.


eight acres: holistic management - four key insights


Brittleness is a very important concept and explains why some farming practices that work in other places are not appropriate here in Australia (later chapters of the book discuss this in more detail).  When considering permaculture and farming techniques that I read about, I now ask myself, how brittle is their landscape?  Will it work here?

This also explains why its so important for us to hold water in the landscape.  As detailed in Peter Andrew's books on Natural Sequence Farming.  We get infrequent rain events, so we can't afford to lose the water to run-off.

3) The Predator-Prey Connection
If you are familiar with Joel Salatin's theories on beef cattle "mob stocking" you will have heard this one before (I'm not sure who came up with it first).  

Grazing animals in the wild tend to bunch together as protection against predators.  They also tend to move through the landscape, rather than staying in one place.  In a mob, these animals cause a short term disturbance of the land by eating and trampling vegetation, dropping dung and urine and scuffing any bare ground with their hoofs.  After they move on, the land has time to recover and regrow. 


eight acres: holistic management - four key insights


This is the opposite to what we do with extensive livestock, often keeping only a few animals on hundreds of acres.  And when we see the resulting damage, we try to rest the land, which only makes the situation worse, as is explained in further chapters.

4) Timing is Everything
This relates to the third insight, in that timing of the animals in the landscape is important.  The landscape must be exposed to grazing animals for long enough to cause disturbance without damage, and then rested enough to allow recovery, without over-rest.

Allan argues that this is why holistic management is so necessary.  It is very difficult to get this timing right without a plan for your entire farming operation.  Figuring out your holistic goal is first and then planning grazing, including developing new fencing and watering points to further improve your operation.

Managing grazing is an entire subject on its own.  Personally I admire the writings of Throwback at Trapper Creek on the subject of grass and rotational grazing.  But I think she is probably in a less brittle landscape (I'm guessing from the green green grass), as is Joel Salatin.  I'm not sure I know of any information about rotational grazing in brittle landscapes.  This just means extra observation and interaction is required (permaculture principle: observe and interact) to get this right.


eight acres: holistic management - four key insights


What do you think?  Are you in a brittle environment?  Have you tried mob-stocking or rotational grazing?


Below are some Amazon affiliate links to books related to Holistic Management.  If you would like to read my reviews of these books, see the following links:

Joel Salatin's books

Peter Andrew's books on Natural Sequence Farming

Permaculture Principles


     
   


Comments

  1. We definitely live in a brittle environment here. Nothing much happens until the rains arrive, and then everything is too wet to work - like the soils which become compact if you disturb them.

    What works for us, and is probably what Savory will lead up to with mob stocking, is having some kind of mulch on the ground at all times. As it reduces the chances of oxidisation from the sun. I find if I can keep the moisture in the the ground by eliminating evaporation, everything slowly decays underneath. Not at the same speed as more humid and wet conditions create, but it stops oxidisation from occurring.

    This is probably why Peter Andrews was a big fan of growing grasses high, then cutting them down to the ground to improve soil and water holding capacity. For the majority of Australian landscape, it has brittle conditions. The coastlines with more dependable rainfalls, are much smaller in comparison.

    You'll probably be seeing connections between Savory and Andrews a lot.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Thanks, I appreciate all your comments, suggestions and questions, but I don't always get time to reply right away. If you need me to reply personally to a question, please leave your email address in the comment or in your profile, or email me directly on eight.acres.liz at gmail.com

Popular posts from this blog

The new Eight Acres website is live!

Very soon this blogspot address will automatically redirect to the new Eight Acres site, but in the meantime, you can check it out here .  You will find all my soaps, ebooks and beeswax/honey products there, as well as the blog (needs a tidy up, but its all there!).  I will be gradually updating all my social media links and updating and sharing blog posts over the next few months.  I'm very excited to share this new website with you!

Farm update - August 2017

Its been cold this month, and very nice to have the fire going every night.  Here's a photo of my boy in his cape, great for late night woofing at things.  Most of July we were either preparing for the butcher to come or putting meat away.  Its always a big job, but its only once a year, and its all done now.  My lovely neighbour came over to help, so it was fun to have the company and work together.  Taz was a champion once again as she helped us to move cattle in the yards ready to load for the market.  Gus is not at that level yet and had to stay home (he cries when he gets left behind, but he just gets in the way and scatters the cattle).  We have had a few sprinkles of rain here and there, but also plenty of cold nights, so the grass is mostly dead and dry, waiting for the warmer weather to revive our summer-active pasture. Gus in his cape Taz after she helped to move cattle Food and cooking It was all about beef in July and we are v...

Neem oil for insect control

** Sign up for my weekly email updates here , you will find out more about soap and our farmlife, straight to your inbox, never miss a post!  New soap website and shop opening soon.... I also make neem soap, neem insect repellent and neem salve, all available in my Etsy shop .** A few weeks ago now I was watering the garden just after dark, torch in one hand, hose in the other, when I was attacked by a swarm of mosquitoes (mozzies).  I could feel them biting me, but there wasn’t much I could do with both hands in use and I really needed to finish watering.  When I came inside I found that I had several bites on each leg between the top of my gumboots and the bottom of my shorts.  These proceeded to itch, swell and annoy me for several days. At this time of year, when the mozzies start biting, as I do have such a terrible reaction to the bites, I usually reach for my bottle of conventional insect repellent, typically containing DEET (N,N-Diethyl-meta-toluamid...