How does a landowner restore minerals to the landscape, after decades of mining the minerals? Two years ago, the Campbells experimented with Redmond sea salt. Located south of Salt Lake City, the company Redmond Natural processes a salt deposited by an ancient sea. Minerals are not additives to the salt, but bonded centuries ago within the salt crystals Used for livestock feed supplements, the rancher decided to apply the salt on the pastures at a rate of 100 pounds per acre. Although this treatment conjures up images of Roman armies destroying fields of their enemies. the outcome of the sea salt application was renewed pasture. Within a short time following the treatment, the cattle stopped eating the supplement from feed bins, and relied on the grasses from the field. The mineral content of the pasture satisfied the cattle.
Cattle can overgraze fields, eating their preferred plants down to the soil. As a result, the less desirable vegetation moves into the space and lowers the quality of the available feed. To address this issue, the Campbell's implemented an aggressive field rotation on their 312 acres of fee land, and 340 acres of leased pasture. During the 40 days of peak growth, the ranchers move the cattle twice a day; the rest of the season they move once a day. The technique not only allows the desired plants to rebound, but so does the root system. The roots and other organic matter form the carbon sink of New Meadows. By comparison, the typical field rotation in the regain is 3 pastures, with the cattle moving once every week to two weeks. The plants and root systems on the Triangle C sequester carbon throughout the growing season. Without the use of fossil fuel intensive fertilizers and pesticides, the carbon footprint is a social and environmental gain.
Annually, the ranch fields receive their shaker of salt, seasoned to the livestock's taste. Ironically, the commodity livestock industry selectively bred cattle that respond to grain finish, and not grass. The Devon is a notable exception. A small number of breeders kept the genetic purity out of the market trend to blend. The cow's physical attributes (pictured in the inset) are nearly ideal, according the Steve Campbell. The features are key indicators of tender beef for the consumer. Breeders pair bulls and cows with confidence that the four small legs behind the udder will mature into an adult with the same fine qualities, without genotype surprises surfacing.