Put Water Where You Want It: A mobile tank increases your pasture-management options
NEW HAMPTON, Iowa–For
less than $900, Mike Reicherts built a mobile waterer and mineral
feeder for his 72 stockers. "I wanted a simple, portable
system that can handle a lot of animals without having to refill
it very often," he says. "You can't buy one. So I built
one myself."
Reicherts views the low-cost tool as a temporary solution for
getting water to all his paddocks. "Our grazing system is
still in transition," he explains. "I don't want to
bury water pipe until I know where I want everything to go."
The foundation of Reicherts' waterer is an old running gear (probably
worth less than $50, he says) and a 1,200-gallon polytank (about
$400 new, but considerably less at farm sales). The tank and gear
are actually on loan from neighbor, and fellow grazier Tom Frantzen,
who used them to fill remote stock tanks before installing his
own permanent below-ground water system.
Reicherts bent 4 by 8-foot sheets of galvanized sheet metal to
form the bottom and long sides of the troughs. Then he welded
on the ends and reinforced the top edges with scrap, three-fourths-inch
pipe. He estimates materials cost about $100 per trough. The gravity-fed
water reaches each trough through plastic tubing connected to
l-inch KGS Midi Flow valves. (Cost: About $35 each. Kentucky Graziers
Supply, 1929 South Main St., Paris KY 40361, (800) 729-0592.)
Reicherts fashioned an angle-iron bracket to carry a Pride of
the Farm three-compartment mineral feeder. (Feeder cost: About
Rather than hauling the waterer back to the farmstead, Reicherts
recharges it from a 500-gallon nurse tank–usually just every
other day, but daily during hot weather. He places the waterer
where he wants to concentrate manure and hoof action. For example,
if I have a thistle infestation, I'll park it right there. High
animal impact increases plant diversity, and hopefully will push
succession forward to more desirable species," he explains.
Even after he installs a permanent water system, Reicherts or
his neighbor will keep the portable one handy for times when they
move animals to remote fields. "This is one of those tools
that increases our flexibility and gives us more options,"
says Reicherts.
Reproduced with permission of the publisher. The New Farm, May/June 1994, p. 55.