Multi-species swards

Best Practices for Cutting and Managing Multi-Species Swards

Cut some slack for those multi-species swards

It’s been a few years since multi-species swards became more than a curiosity, a move inspired by – if not driven by – the mushrooming interest in regenerative techniques. Over to Janet Montgomery, Barenbrug’s Agriculture Product Manager.

The multi-species sward might just be one of the best ways of combining grass, herbs and legumes for the greater good: better soil, better grass, better animals, better farming.

Multi-species swards

Building a Resilient Ecosystem

By keeping that soil protected from the effects of heavy rain and damaging sunlight by a layer of multi-species vegetation, rooting to varying depths, you’ve created a fully functioning ecosystem that – without any further input – uses, exploits and leverages the natural interactions between microbes, fungi, roots, exudates and growing plants. 

Multi-species swards have proved the best, most accessible way to ‘wean’ yourself off the ‘one size fits all’ grass orthodoxy we’ve pursued for at least half a century.

Multi-species swards

Supporting the Farm Fodder Flow Concept

Multi-species swards also lend themselves perfectly to our establishing concept of Farm Fodder Flow – the premise that matches the farm’s productive capacity to the animals’ dietary needs. When undertaken to perfection, Farm Fodder Flow will not only help you reduce the need for bought-in feeds, but also reduce your own concerns about whether you’ll have enough home-produced feed to achieve that.

 

A Growing Trend Across the UK

There’s no data – yet – on how many farms have taken the plunge with a multi-species sward. But by my reckoning – keeping my eyes peeled on trips around the country – there’s now a fair few hectares of these resource-rich swards keeping stock well-fed and soils healthy.

Making Silage from Multi-Species Swards

So, what if you want to make silage from your multi-species swards?

All well and good, of course. Filling the clamp with a cut from a multi-species sward makes great silage. But the aftermath – that’s where a little knowledge can go a long way. The operative term, in any multi-species sward, and however you’re using it, is ‘population dynamics’. It’s even more relevant when silaging these swards.

Multi-species swards

Cut Higher, Not Harder

I’ll put it bluntly. Don’t smash them. Treat them with some favour by cutting them a little higher than you would for a ‘standard’, full-on perennial ryegrass sward. Rather than the 5cm you might target for perennial ryegrass, set the mower a little higher and aim for 8cm.

Protecting Herbs and Legumes

Why? Well, those beneficial herbs and legumes don’t like to be cut too low: their growing point is higher, and the regrowing period longer, than perennial ryegrass. 

So, although the mixture has a perennial ryegrass base, cut that multi-species sward some slack. Switch up the management plan if you want to give your herbs and legumes the advantage – and keep them in the sward as long as biologically possible.

Because…if you carry on managing for perennial ryegrass, then your marvellous, beneficial multi-species sward is going to end up as... perennial ryegrass.