DiscoverGet Goat Wise | Meat Goats, Dairy Goats, Self-Sufficiency, Sustainable Farm, Homesteading, Off-Grid, Livestock88 | Regenerative Ranching Is a Process, Not a Destination: How We Actually Make Decisions
88 | Regenerative Ranching Is a Process, Not a Destination: How We Actually Make Decisions

88 | Regenerative Ranching Is a Process, Not a Destination: How We Actually Make Decisions

Update: 2025-12-15
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Regenerative agriculture can feel like a buzzword, a badge, or a list of practices you’re supposed to follow. But in real life, and especially in a challenging climate, regeneration is a process of learning, comparing ideas against your own environment, testing small changes, observing what your land and animals are telling you, and adjusting as you go.


In this episode, I’m sharing the decision-making loop we use on our ranch with both goats and cattle, and why I see multi-species grazing as a long-term benefit—even though it adds complexity in the beginning. I also walk through our big-picture goal of reducing supplemental hay by extending the grazing season, and the real constraints we have to work within, like limited moisture, fragile pasture, frozen ground, predators, and wildlife pressure.


You’ll hear how we’re approaching water infiltration and soil building in a dry climate, why we’re testing straw bales to slow runoff first, and what we’ve already observed from years of intensive rotational grazing, chicken tractors, and summer bale grazing. I also explain why certain popular practices don’t translate well to goat management in our conditions—and how we adapt without abandoning the principles.


In This Episode, I Cover:

  • Why regenerative agriculture is a process, not a destination

  • The decision-making loop: Learn → Compare Context → Clarify Goals → Test → Observe → Adjust → Repeat

  • How to learn from other producers without copy-pasting their practices

  • Shifting from “this won’t work in my climate” to “how do these principles apply here?”

  • Why nature is the best teacher and how to use observation as your guide

  • Our big-picture goal: reducing hay by extending spring and fall grazing

  • The resource bottleneck in dry country: water infiltration and water-holding capacity

  • Why soil cover and organic matter are critical in moisture-limited environments

  • Using straw bales to slow runoff as a low-risk way to test water flow paths

  • What we’ve observed after 5 years of intensive rotational grazing

  • The forage improvements we’ve seen from chicken tractors and summer bale grazing

  • Why winter bale grazing is risky/not feasible for us right now (electric netting in frozen ground, elk pressure)

  • A winter feeding strategy that works within predator pressure and management reality

  • A soil-building feeding approach we’re preparing to test (and why snow cover matters)

  • Why we’re not buying a no-till drill right now—and what we want in place first

  • Why starting with annuals can make sense before investing in expensive perennial seed


Key Takeaways:

  • Regenerative practices aren’t universal—principles transfer, but application must fit your climate and animals.

  • Nature is the best teacher: observation turns theory into real management decisions.

  • Start with clear goals and real constraints, then break big objectives into small, testable steps.

  • Moisture-limited land requires prioritizing water infiltration, water-holding capacity, and soil cover.

  • Testing small and reversible ideas (like straw bales) can prevent expensive mistakes.

  • Multi-species grazing is a long-term benefit, but it adds complexity—especially in the beginning.

  • “Not yet” is a valid answer on tools and investments; timing matters.

  • Progress comes from repeated cycles of learning, testing, observing, and adjusting—not from perfection.


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Related Episodes:

All the Best,

Millie


 


Resources & Links:

Disclaimer:

The information shared in this episode is for educational purposes only and should not be considered veterinary advice. Always consult a licensed veterinarian for animal health guidance.


*As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases

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88 | Regenerative Ranching Is a Process, Not a Destination: How We Actually Make Decisions

88 | Regenerative Ranching Is a Process, Not a Destination: How We Actually Make Decisions

Millie Bradshaw - Animal Scientist, Rancher, Homesteader