Most people would agree that topping is a fairly good indication as to how good or bad grassland management is on a farm.
Frequent topping during the course of the grazing season in an effort to bring grass back under control points to a number of issues including stocking rate, pre-grazing grass height (covers) and grazing infrastructure, for example.
That said, it still does have a role to play.
Benefits
From a grass quality point of view, it has benefits. Grassland research in New Zealand showed that topping pasture after grazing increased the quality of pasture by 0.6 MJ ME/kg DM (metabolisable energy/kg DM) during spring and summer. It also showed that topping resulted in a higher DM intake (1.9kg DM) during midsummer.
The same research, however, did go on to show that overall grass DM production for the year decreased as a result of topping and concluded that the practice should be very much a quality control measure in isolated cases rather than a whole-farm approach to grassland management.
The current situation
At this stage, most grazing blocks will be on their third rotation and some may be on their fourth or even fifth. After a number of grazings, it is highly likely that a thicker butt will be starting to appear in many swards, and the graze-outs that were being achieved a month ago will be a lot harder to achieve this time around.
Added to this, growth has been excellent over the last two weeks. Grass that was moving steadily at 8-9cm was suddenly over 10cm and 12cm.
The general rule of thumb is to remove any strong grass covers as surplus silage and this should still be the first port-of-call – but this needs to be within reason.
Bales
Putting a large area of ground into bales and falling into a situation where you have too little grass is not the right thing either.
At this time of the year, you need 10 days ahead at minimum, and 12 to 14 to be comfortable. Anything over this, by all means cut away.
But with many facing the need to graze a small number of heavier paddocks to keep grass in front of cattle, there is every likelihood that post-grazing covers will be higher than what they should be, particularly on wet ground.
For these reasons, topping should at least be a consideration during the next rotation.
Things to consider
Here are just a few points to consider.