"Improving Our Lot" - Planned Holistic Grazing, for starters..

Kiwi Pete

Member
Livestock Farmer
Its still a purchased input .I looked up silica as well- the most common element in the soil and earth’s crust. We just have to farm in such a way as to make the beneficial minerals more available. They are all, mostly, in the soil already.
Silica and the Soil Part 3

Ocean water has a pH of over 8.0 and in that environment aluminium forms hydroxides. These hydroxides are relatively inactive. This process is demonstrated when a bright new aluminium boat is placed into ocean water. The aluminium surface reacts to produce hydroxides and oxides which form a protective layer on the hull.

Aluminium, in soils is somewhat similar in that there are many types of aluminium bonds including oxides and hydroxides. Aluminium becomes the most toxic to soil bacterium, plant roots and mycorrhizal fungi when it is free as a 3+ion.

Given that, at around 8%, aluminium is the third most abundant metal in the earth’s crust and given that it is toxic in certain forms you would think that our reliance on the soil for our survival would demand that we pay more attention to it. Certainly, in human health this is becoming a major topic of discussion. The modern human being is exposed to an unprecedented bombardment of products that contain aluminium.

Our practices in agriculture are subjecting the soil to the same bombardment in the sense that when acidulated fertilisers are applied, the acid breaks down soil aluminium bonds very quickly. This is exacerbated when the aluminium has been bound in hydroxide form and results in the release of water and aluminium 3+ions.

The acid in these amendments attack the silica compounds at the same time, rendering them incapable of being made available as an essential nutrient. The combined effect of bringing aluminium into solution and immobilising the silica, the very element that can remedy excessive aluminium, is a disaster.

With the abundance of silicon (27%) and aluminium in the earth’s crust it is no surprise that these two elements combine to create over 95% of natural clays. Although many and varied these alumno-silicates are the basis of most of the soils on the planet.

One method of dealing with soil Aluminium toxicity is to apply lime products to bring the pH up and allow the aluminium to form hydroxides but there appears to be a major problem once you do this. Aluminium being a 3+ element strongly bonds to other important plant nutrients such as phosphate (3-). The bonding of these two elements creates Variscite and silica as we have discussed. From what we have experienced, when there is free aluminium it is also an indication that the soils are deficient in available silica. The evidence is showing us that this can come about very quickly in soils that are rich in silica and have low levels of aluminium. The outcome depends on how these soils are treated.

When silica is in an available form, the first thing it does is bond with aluminium. The aluminium in solution is bound into clay particles as alumno-silicates. It is only when this occurs that we actually see the nutritional benefits of silica in our soil, crops and animals. Silica is made plant available by silicate mineral-solubilising bacterial strains such as Bacillus globisporus. Soils have to be in a state that supports biological function in order for silica to be made available by this function.

Here in New Zealand we have a propensity to overuse Super Phosphate. On our Volcanic Ash soils there couldn’t be anything more harmful. New Zealand soil testing Laboratories include a Phosphate Retention Test. On ash and pumice soils it is common to see phosphate retention reported at 85% - 100%. What this means is that there is so much free Aluminium in the soil that any soluble phosphorus applied to it will be bound up immediately. This test is now called the anion storage capacity; possibly to take the focus off phosphorus!

A Brookside Laboratories Total Soil extraction test will commonly report from 7 to 10 tons of phosphorus in the sample depth of 150mm per hectare that is bonded so effectively that only 5% - 10% is able to be mobilised by the Brookside Laboratories nutrient available test. Putting more on is certainly not the answer but if you do it allows you to look like a moron!

We have tried various analytical tests with inconclusive results, yet with soil structure observation, aluminium tests, phosphorus availability and plant and animal health observations combined, have all proved useful to assess silica input requirements and the effects of silica amendments. Then there is the next major issue: If a silica deficiency is identified what products are available to remedy that situation? There are some very good liquid silicic acid products that can be utilised for cropping to alleviate silica nutrient issues but these don’t appear to be cost effective when trying to balance the aluminium and restore the soils silica status in broad acre farming.

Other products such as slag from steel production proved to be excellent but their inconsistent availability and potential toxic effect to livestock can be a major problem. The most interesting part of the slag is that they were created with great heat in an environment with oxygen availability. This tended to create hydroxides of Calcium and Magnesium that had been introduced to attract the impurities that would float to the surface in the furnace. These hydroxides became part of the slag.

It is only when you take on this information and observe nature and her volcanic “furnaces” that we can actually find cost effective products if you figure out where to look, even if there have been anomalies observed in their production.

My Father and Grandfather bought a peat swamp in 1952 and developed it into firstly a sheep and beef farm and then converted that farm into a dairy farm in the early 1980’s. There were many incidents, during this process which didn’t make sense. In particular, on one side of the road the grass, in the front 200 meters of an 800 meter long paddock grew at double the rate of the rest of the paddock. Soil samples didn’t show any difference between the two areas but come on!? Double!

No one seemed interested in this phenomenon and the only thing we observed, out of the ordinary was when developing this country and we hit a layer of volcanic ash that varied in depth around the farm. It responded almost immediately when it reached the surface.

We dismissed it because we thought it was only sand but we should have persisted with those observations because where we brought sand and the finer clay particles of the same material to the surface we always observed the same amazing growth responses.

In peat soils Aluminium is not a player so the silica component of the sand that we brought to the surface was not inhibited. The thing that temporarily confused me was that although the sand containing 70% SiO2 it also contained 10% AlO3. In all other aspects it had been produced under great heat as it had come from the Taupo

volcanic eruption of 186 AD that occurred some 200km south of the farm. One of nature’s most devastating silica factories!! If you want to gauge how big the eruption was just Google Lake Taupo.

Over time and testing we have realised that we can obtain the necessary silica from these volcanic sands. Sands with Silicon are to be found on both islands in New Zealand. The high ratio of silica allows the formation of more stable alumino-silicates and leaves some silica to become biologically available as silicic acid. Plant nutrients such as Phosphorus are released to plant availability through this process.

Aluminium and silica sit next to each other on the periodic table and in clay structures they run at 1 part aluminium to 1 to 2 parts silica. Hydrated alumino-silicates are often classed as zeolites which have numerous uses with some being utilised with fertilisers because zeolites have a very high cation exchange capacity which can be used to carry nutrients such as nitrogen products. Zeolites can reduce leaching and extend nutrient availability.

What I have observed over time is that if the hydroxide forms of silica are broken down by acid fertilsers to the silica crystal SiO2 or if they bind with aluminium then soil biology does not appear to be able to break that bond and in a land of phosphorus plenty phosphorus deficiency symptoms abound!

The results gained by fixing this situation can be quite startling and we will delve into the nutritional requirements and effects in the next article.

Continued in Part 4

To read the complete story on Silica and Soil check it out at:
[http://ecofarmaotearoa.com/silica-our-soils/]

@Crofter64 I'm not sure if you're on FB, but Ewan Campbell is the bloke who wrote these articles. Ewan was publicly shut-down by NZ fert cooperatives in the court system by advocating the use of silica sands as "fertiliser" which to the courts represented a case of "misleading" the public
...which, is interesting, as I think it was @Blaithin who was defining fertiliser on here, or maybe Roy's thread.
I'd say sand is definitely a fertiliser if it is helping raise fertility and production, but then I don't have to battle it out in court with companies selling toxic waste to farmers
 

Bury the Trash

Member
Mixed Farmer
Silica and the Soil Part 3

Ocean water has a pH of over 8.0 and in that environment aluminium forms hydroxides. These hydroxides are relatively inactive. This process is demonstrated when a bright new aluminium boat is placed into ocean water. The aluminium surface reacts to produce hydroxides and oxides which form a protective layer on the hull.

Aluminium, in soils is somewhat similar in that there are many types of aluminium bonds including oxides and hydroxides. Aluminium becomes the most toxic to soil bacterium, plant roots and mycorrhizal fungi when it is free as a 3+ion.

Given that, at around 8%, aluminium is the third most abundant metal in the earth’s crust and given that it is toxic in certain forms you would think that our reliance on the soil for our survival would demand that we pay more attention to it. Certainly, in human health this is becoming a major topic of discussion. The modern human being is exposed to an unprecedented bombardment of products that contain aluminium.

Our practices in agriculture are subjecting the soil to the same bombardment in the sense that when acidulated fertilisers are applied, the acid breaks down soil aluminium bonds very quickly. This is exacerbated when the aluminium has been bound in hydroxide form and results in the release of water and aluminium 3+ions.

The acid in these amendments attack the silica compounds at the same time, rendering them incapable of being made available as an essential nutrient. The combined effect of bringing aluminium into solution and immobilising the silica, the very element that can remedy excessive aluminium, is a disaster.

With the abundance of silicon (27%) and aluminium in the earth’s crust it is no surprise that these two elements combine to create over 95% of natural clays. Although many and varied these alumno-silicates are the basis of most of the soils on the planet.

One method of dealing with soil Aluminium toxicity is to apply lime products to bring the pH up and allow the aluminium to form hydroxides but there appears to be a major problem once you do this. Aluminium being a 3+ element strongly bonds to other important plant nutrients such as phosphate (3-). The bonding of these two elements creates Variscite and silica as we have discussed. From what we have experienced, when there is free aluminium it is also an indication that the soils are deficient in available silica. The evidence is showing us that this can come about very quickly in soils that are rich in silica and have low levels of aluminium. The outcome depends on how these soils are treated.

When silica is in an available form, the first thing it does is bond with aluminium. The aluminium in solution is bound into clay particles as alumno-silicates. It is only when this occurs that we actually see the nutritional benefits of silica in our soil, crops and animals. Silica is made plant available by silicate mineral-solubilising bacterial strains such as Bacillus globisporus. Soils have to be in a state that supports biological function in order for silica to be made available by this function.

Here in New Zealand we have a propensity to overuse Super Phosphate. On our Volcanic Ash soils there couldn’t be anything more harmful. New Zealand soil testing Laboratories include a Phosphate Retention Test. On ash and pumice soils it is common to see phosphate retention reported at 85% - 100%. What this means is that there is so much free Aluminium in the soil that any soluble phosphorus applied to it will be bound up immediately. This test is now called the anion storage capacity; possibly to take the focus off phosphorus!

A Brookside Laboratories Total Soil extraction test will commonly report from 7 to 10 tons of phosphorus in the sample depth of 150mm per hectare that is bonded so effectively that only 5% - 10% is able to be mobilised by the Brookside Laboratories nutrient available test. Putting more on is certainly not the answer but if you do it allows you to look like a moron!

We have tried various analytical tests with inconclusive results, yet with soil structure observation, aluminium tests, phosphorus availability and plant and animal health observations combined, have all proved useful to assess silica input requirements and the effects of silica amendments. Then there is the next major issue: If a silica deficiency is identified what products are available to remedy that situation? There are some very good liquid silicic acid products that can be utilised for cropping to alleviate silica nutrient issues but these don’t appear to be cost effective when trying to balance the aluminium and restore the soils silica status in broad acre farming.

Other products such as slag from steel production proved to be excellent but their inconsistent availability and potential toxic effect to livestock can be a major problem. The most interesting part of the slag is that they were created with great heat in an environment with oxygen availability. This tended to create hydroxides of Calcium and Magnesium that had been introduced to attract the impurities that would float to the surface in the furnace. These hydroxides became part of the slag.

It is only when you take on this information and observe nature and her volcanic “furnaces” that we can actually find cost effective products if you figure out where to look, even if there have been anomalies observed in their production.

My Father and Grandfather bought a peat swamp in 1952 and developed it into firstly a sheep and beef farm and then converted that farm into a dairy farm in the early 1980’s. There were many incidents, during this process which didn’t make sense. In particular, on one side of the road the grass, in the front 200 meters of an 800 meter long paddock grew at double the rate of the rest of the paddock. Soil samples didn’t show any difference between the two areas but come on!? Double!

No one seemed interested in this phenomenon and the only thing we observed, out of the ordinary was when developing this country and we hit a layer of volcanic ash that varied in depth around the farm. It responded almost immediately when it reached the surface.

We dismissed it because we thought it was only sand but we should have persisted with those observations because where we brought sand and the finer clay particles of the same material to the surface we always observed the same amazing growth responses.

In peat soils Aluminium is not a player so the silica component of the sand that we brought to the surface was not inhibited. The thing that temporarily confused me was that although the sand containing 70% SiO2 it also contained 10% AlO3. In all other aspects it had been produced under great heat as it had come from the Taupo

volcanic eruption of 186 AD that occurred some 200km south of the farm. One of nature’s most devastating silica factories!! If you want to gauge how big the eruption was just Google Lake Taupo.

Over time and testing we have realised that we can obtain the necessary silica from these volcanic sands. Sands with Silicon are to be found on both islands in New Zealand. The high ratio of silica allows the formation of more stable alumino-silicates and leaves some silica to become biologically available as silicic acid. Plant nutrients such as Phosphorus are released to plant availability through this process.

Aluminium and silica sit next to each other on the periodic table and in clay structures they run at 1 part aluminium to 1 to 2 parts silica. Hydrated alumino-silicates are often classed as zeolites which have numerous uses with some being utilised with fertilisers because zeolites have a very high cation exchange capacity which can be used to carry nutrients such as nitrogen products. Zeolites can reduce leaching and extend nutrient availability.

What I have observed over time is that if the hydroxide forms of silica are broken down by acid fertilsers to the silica crystal SiO2 or if they bind with aluminium then soil biology does not appear to be able to break that bond and in a land of phosphorus plenty phosphorus deficiency symptoms abound!

The results gained by fixing this situation can be quite startling and we will delve into the nutritional requirements and effects in the next article.

Continued in Part 4

To read the complete story on Silica and Soil check it out at:
[http://ecofarmaotearoa.com/silica-our-soils/]

@Crofter64 I'm not sure if you're on FB, but Ewan Campbell is the bloke who wrote these articles. Ewan was publicly shut-down by NZ fert cooperatives in the court system by advocating the use of silica sands as "fertiliser" which to the courts represented a case of "misleading" the public
...which, is interesting, as I think it was @Blaithin who was defining fertiliser on here, or maybe Roy's thread.
I'd say sand is definitely a fertiliser if it is helping raise fertility and production, but then I don't have to battle it out in court with companies selling toxic waste to farmers
Would have to get limespreaders to spread it I guess is what we or builders call 'silver sand' silica ? I wonder it's what they use in concrete aggregate etc.. :unsure:
 

Kiwi Pete

Member
Livestock Farmer
20200709_114521.jpg

Had a good wash-off @Henarar, 137mm since they were in here a week ago
20200709_113656.jpg

Where they came from before they went inside
20200709_113625.jpg

Creek below it, still taking some water
20200709_114737.jpg

a month behind them
 

Kiwi Pete

Member
Livestock Farmer
Would have to get limespreaders to spread it I guess is what we or builders call 'silver sand' silica ? I wonder it's what they use in concrete aggregate etc.. :unsure:
Here's part 4 of the story for you





April 15, 2020
Silica & the Soil Part 4

Silicon is not listed as an essential plant nutrient; the question I have to ask is; WHY?
When we investigate this element we find a wide range of information including cereal and rice crop trial data that demonstrates silicon’s influence on increased yields and disease resistance, silicon’s influence on nutrient transport and so on.
The book Silicon in Agriculture; Studies in Plant Science 8: LE Datnoff, GH Snyder and GH Korndorfer (Editors) is a major compilation of trial work using different Silicon amendments on a vast array of crops in differing soil types. This showed dramatic yield, nutrient and disease resistance increases. From a pastoral farming perspective, it is significant that rice, wheat and sugar cane are higher evolved grasses that have been selected for their grain potential. In pastoral agriculture silicon is barely mentioned, in fertiliser discussions, yet raising healthy stock is dependent on healthy and functional grasses, forbs and legumes. The health and functionality of grasses, forbs and legumes has a direct influence on how we treat our farms and just as significantly, the quality of the products grown with that pasture whether that is meat, milk or fibre.
The progression has been very interesting. I can only state here that the progression that I have seen is based on long term observations throughout my farming career. These observations cross referenced with valid testing methodologies that measure mineral, fat and protein contents in the end products and also match with improve animal health, higher weight gains and better overall production. So, when significant progression occurs after the addition of Silicon, a mineral that is supposedly not essential then I would say that Silicon is very essential!
Having trained with Brookside laboratories some twenty odd years ago I have been able to utilise the vast amount of information available to consultants to help create what I call the foundation of soil mineral potential. It is when this foundation is put into place and then other factors such as Cyanobacteria, differing fungal species, the role of electricity and electromagnetic’s in plant nutrition, plant species diversity, and appropriate grazing management are added in that we can see that the vast interplay is all interconnected and interdependent. It is incredibly important to consider all these factors when building any soil-based farming business
In a roundabout way my Silica journey has taken me back to a place somewhere near where I started. I utilised basic slag early on in my farming career; predominantly as a calcium and magnesium source, I originally failed to connect the dots as to how important the Silicon portion of the basic slag was because I was focused on the Albrecht calcium magnesium balancing. It was only when I started investigating the electrical potential and the biological processes that real progress occurred. There were certain things that I had observed and measured when I had utilised basic slag that did not appear replicable and I did not understand the mechanism of that progression until now.
I came across the work of George Washington Carey about six years ago. Carey, a medical doctor had studied the essential nature of the 12 tissue salts, and throughout his work he explains the necessity of these salts for cell health and function. He also expresses, at length, the symptoms and diseases that come about from deficiencies of each of these salts. The work finds a happy companion in Maynard Murrays findings of utilising Ocean elements in agriculture. Ocean water is the environment where the 12 cell salts naturally exist. This should also be the case for us because blood is minerally identical to ocean water. I also note Richard Olree’s brilliant work “Minerals for the Genetic Code” but that is another story in itself.

I always find it fascinating to take this information back into the realms of the soil and the products we produce from that soil. The farm and food production should always be the first step in any analysis and diagnosis of human health. And we as farmers always should always be striving to produce the healthiest products possible that will then help bring our population into health and wellbeing. Let food be thy medicine!
Carey’s work determines Silicon to be of the utmost importance in the strength and development of our hip bones. Personally, I have been through the issue of dodgy hips and I have utilised natural forms of the 12 tissue salts, combined with healthy doses of Silica to fix that impairment. It was most obvious on certain parts of the farm, where we grazed our breeding cows that the real symptoms of silica deficiency really expressed themselves.
The first sign something was going on was the cows chewing wood, alkathene water pipe, rocks and various other bits and pieces they could get too. We made up a mineral lick that included diatomaceous earth. The cows demolished the lick but that wasn’t really sorting out the problem. On different parts of the farm symptoms were not as bad. What was noticeable was the decreasing width of the hip bones in the cows and the fact that this trait was being passed on.
We tried many differing mineral supplements, to no avail until we started spreading volcanic sands onto the paddocks. These sands are a product of the type of volcanic eruptions that engulfed this land relatively recently. They have a significant silica component that has been exposed to great heat and pressure. This silica becomes available to the soil / plant environment when it is exposed to silica solubilising soil bacteria. One easily observed result has been to get the width back in the cow’s hips and seeing that the stock has stopped chewing everything in sight. We are also able to test various other parameters in the soil as these changes come about and its very interesting.
Cow-Silica-Deficient.png

Cow with Silica Deficiency
Cow-wiht-adequate-silica.png

Cow with Adequate Silica
As we introduce the hydrated silica sand we are observing around a 200ppm decrease in extractable aluminium per year in our soil test results. Along with this the NO3 Nitrate and NH4 Ammonia are held in the soil in equilibrium at a more balanced level of around 10ppm each which is very adequate to run a high producing property without synthetic nitrogen inputs.
Quality-grasses-coming-thru-on-trial-plots.png

Midwinter Feed
The noticeable impact on young stock is clean tails and no chemical animal health remedies are required. Also, very noticeable is the fact that when I am in amongst them there is not the tell-tale sour nitrate smell and they are very settled in their behaviour. Observations, so far lead us to believe that much lower milk urea nitrogen and blood urea nitrogen levels are occurring which we will correlate over time while working with more and more farmers.
Above the ground this is also expressing itself in much better all year round pasture production. Our usual winter hay supplement of 180 round bales has fallen to well below 50 bales last winter. A great cost-saving on the 250 cattle we winter each year.
Other noticeable visual changes are soil depth, which is increasing at a rapid rate. This has a valuable by-product in the form of increased amounts of soil organic carbon and enhanced soil water holding and nutrient holding capability.
Increased-Soil-Depth-Silica.png

The results of our testing for total soil nutrients, available soil nutrients and soil organic carbon confirms to me that Silicon is an essential nutrient. How can it not be when it impacts so many parts of healthy biological farming systems?
I must emphasise that silicon is not the “silver bullet” answer to everything but it performs many valuable functions. Its absence leads to inefficiencies and unnecessary costs. I have learned the lesson to always question opinions such as “Silicon is not an essential plant nutrient”.
Richard Olree’s work on the 64 subatomic particles and minerals that make up a healthy genetic sequence, Maynard Murrays work on Ocean elements, Albrecht’s breakthroughs on base saturation and trace elements, Davis & Rawls and Phil Callaghan’s work on the effects of electro-magnetism on biological systems are all the building blocks for productive soils. When we take this information and attitude into farming anything is possible and I’m lucky enough to be enjoying it.

@Tarw Coch you may find this discussion interesting
 

Kiwi Pete

Member
Livestock Farmer
20200709_150641.jpg

Funny big sponge @Henarar
You can only just see where I rode the quad across to give an idea of how firm it is, but I'm looking right down the RH wheeltrack.

Will turn the mob back out tomorrow, gave them a bit much baleage this morning and they are all lying down full.
20200709_155455.jpg

still a fair bit of water coming down from the neighbours.
20200709_182002.jpg

then the sun went away so I went back inside
 

holwellcourtfarm

Member
Livestock Farmer
Here's part 4 of the story for you





April 15, 2020
Silica & the Soil Part 4

Silicon is not listed as an essential plant nutrient; the question I have to ask is; WHY?
When we investigate this element we find a wide range of information including cereal and rice crop trial data that demonstrates silicon’s influence on increased yields and disease resistance, silicon’s influence on nutrient transport and so on.
The book Silicon in Agriculture; Studies in Plant Science 8: LE Datnoff, GH Snyder and GH Korndorfer (Editors) is a major compilation of trial work using different Silicon amendments on a vast array of crops in differing soil types. This showed dramatic yield, nutrient and disease resistance increases. From a pastoral farming perspective, it is significant that rice, wheat and sugar cane are higher evolved grasses that have been selected for their grain potential. In pastoral agriculture silicon is barely mentioned, in fertiliser discussions, yet raising healthy stock is dependent on healthy and functional grasses, forbs and legumes. The health and functionality of grasses, forbs and legumes has a direct influence on how we treat our farms and just as significantly, the quality of the products grown with that pasture whether that is meat, milk or fibre.
The progression has been very interesting. I can only state here that the progression that I have seen is based on long term observations throughout my farming career. These observations cross referenced with valid testing methodologies that measure mineral, fat and protein contents in the end products and also match with improve animal health, higher weight gains and better overall production. So, when significant progression occurs after the addition of Silicon, a mineral that is supposedly not essential then I would say that Silicon is very essential!
Having trained with Brookside laboratories some twenty odd years ago I have been able to utilise the vast amount of information available to consultants to help create what I call the foundation of soil mineral potential. It is when this foundation is put into place and then other factors such as Cyanobacteria, differing fungal species, the role of electricity and electromagnetic’s in plant nutrition, plant species diversity, and appropriate grazing management are added in that we can see that the vast interplay is all interconnected and interdependent. It is incredibly important to consider all these factors when building any soil-based farming business
In a roundabout way my Silica journey has taken me back to a place somewhere near where I started. I utilised basic slag early on in my farming career; predominantly as a calcium and magnesium source, I originally failed to connect the dots as to how important the Silicon portion of the basic slag was because I was focused on the Albrecht calcium magnesium balancing. It was only when I started investigating the electrical potential and the biological processes that real progress occurred. There were certain things that I had observed and measured when I had utilised basic slag that did not appear replicable and I did not understand the mechanism of that progression until now.
I came across the work of George Washington Carey about six years ago. Carey, a medical doctor had studied the essential nature of the 12 tissue salts, and throughout his work he explains the necessity of these salts for cell health and function. He also expresses, at length, the symptoms and diseases that come about from deficiencies of each of these salts. The work finds a happy companion in Maynard Murrays findings of utilising Ocean elements in agriculture. Ocean water is the environment where the 12 cell salts naturally exist. This should also be the case for us because blood is minerally identical to ocean water. I also note Richard Olree’s brilliant work “Minerals for the Genetic Code” but that is another story in itself.

I always find it fascinating to take this information back into the realms of the soil and the products we produce from that soil. The farm and food production should always be the first step in any analysis and diagnosis of human health. And we as farmers always should always be striving to produce the healthiest products possible that will then help bring our population into health and wellbeing. Let food be thy medicine!
Carey’s work determines Silicon to be of the utmost importance in the strength and development of our hip bones. Personally, I have been through the issue of dodgy hips and I have utilised natural forms of the 12 tissue salts, combined with healthy doses of Silica to fix that impairment. It was most obvious on certain parts of the farm, where we grazed our breeding cows that the real symptoms of silica deficiency really expressed themselves.
The first sign something was going on was the cows chewing wood, alkathene water pipe, rocks and various other bits and pieces they could get too. We made up a mineral lick that included diatomaceous earth. The cows demolished the lick but that wasn’t really sorting out the problem. On different parts of the farm symptoms were not as bad. What was noticeable was the decreasing width of the hip bones in the cows and the fact that this trait was being passed on.
We tried many differing mineral supplements, to no avail until we started spreading volcanic sands onto the paddocks. These sands are a product of the type of volcanic eruptions that engulfed this land relatively recently. They have a significant silica component that has been exposed to great heat and pressure. This silica becomes available to the soil / plant environment when it is exposed to silica solubilising soil bacteria. One easily observed result has been to get the width back in the cow’s hips and seeing that the stock has stopped chewing everything in sight. We are also able to test various other parameters in the soil as these changes come about and its very interesting.
Cow-Silica-Deficient.png

Cow with Silica Deficiency
Cow-wiht-adequate-silica.png

Cow with Adequate Silica
As we introduce the hydrated silica sand we are observing around a 200ppm decrease in extractable aluminium per year in our soil test results. Along with this the NO3 Nitrate and NH4 Ammonia are held in the soil in equilibrium at a more balanced level of around 10ppm each which is very adequate to run a high producing property without synthetic nitrogen inputs.
Quality-grasses-coming-thru-on-trial-plots.png

Midwinter Feed
The noticeable impact on young stock is clean tails and no chemical animal health remedies are required. Also, very noticeable is the fact that when I am in amongst them there is not the tell-tale sour nitrate smell and they are very settled in their behaviour. Observations, so far lead us to believe that much lower milk urea nitrogen and blood urea nitrogen levels are occurring which we will correlate over time while working with more and more farmers.
Above the ground this is also expressing itself in much better all year round pasture production. Our usual winter hay supplement of 180 round bales has fallen to well below 50 bales last winter. A great cost-saving on the 250 cattle we winter each year.
Other noticeable visual changes are soil depth, which is increasing at a rapid rate. This has a valuable by-product in the form of increased amounts of soil organic carbon and enhanced soil water holding and nutrient holding capability.
Increased-Soil-Depth-Silica.png

The results of our testing for total soil nutrients, available soil nutrients and soil organic carbon confirms to me that Silicon is an essential nutrient. How can it not be when it impacts so many parts of healthy biological farming systems?
I must emphasise that silicon is not the “silver bullet” answer to everything but it performs many valuable functions. Its absence leads to inefficiencies and unnecessary costs. I have learned the lesson to always question opinions such as “Silicon is not an essential plant nutrient”.
Richard Olree’s work on the 64 subatomic particles and minerals that make up a healthy genetic sequence, Maynard Murrays work on Ocean elements, Albrecht’s breakthroughs on base saturation and trace elements, Davis & Rawls and Phil Callaghan’s work on the effects of electro-magnetism on biological systems are all the building blocks for productive soils. When we take this information and attitude into farming anything is possible and I’m lucky enough to be enjoying it.

@Tarw Coch you may find this discussion interesting
Interesting. We are predominantly on sand whereas Dad, 5 miles away, is predominantly on blue clay. I've never seen cattle here chewing random things but at Dad's they often chew exposed water pipes.
 

Henarar

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Somerset
View attachment 893196
Funny big sponge @Henarar
You can only just see where I rode the quad across to give an idea of how firm it is, but I'm looking right down the RH wheeltrack.

Will turn the mob back out tomorrow, gave them a bit much baleage this morning and they are all lying down full.View attachment 893197
still a fair bit of water coming down from the neighbours.View attachment 893198
then the sun went away so I went back inside
It's not trod up just flattened
 

Henarar

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Somerset
This is the field that should have been cut been grazed a few times there are not many "weeds" in here, just goung to see what happens with it.
Looks a mess don't it
20200709_073115.jpg
The cows seem to like to lie up the top corner and the winter sheep definitely do, always more spring grass up there
Mind you It looks like Rusty has fallen out with the rest
 

Rob Garrett

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Derbyshire UK
Interesting. We are predominantly on sand whereas Dad, 5 miles away, is predominantly on blue clay. I've never seen cattle here chewing random things but at Dad's they often chew exposed water pipes.
Over sandstone (gritstone) here, so you would think no problems with silica, but isn't Sandstone formed totally different to Basalt? I did try to get some Basic Slag for a muck/compost addmix idea (Basic Slag + Mag Lime + Gypsum + Ag Salt), but couldn't get it and we are only a stone's throw from Sheffield! Think the addmix idea was inspired by Gary Zimmer's book The Biological Farmer, an interesting read.
 

Kiwi Pete

Member
Livestock Farmer
Looking good there, how are the sheep and their grass looking?
How are other farms looking, lot of mud about?
Not too bad, never too good at this time of year, most of the neighbours have had enough and put their mobs onto the crops (swedes, kale) but I did see some nice black looking paddocks (and underwater ones!) when I took some stuff to the accountant today.

We're pretty much skinning our paddocks out now, still putting the odd bit of hay out to keep the heifers happy and just keep that wee bit more litter going in.
20200704_092424.jpg

Not much of a residual

We will be scanning the hoggs shortly and we'll offload any dry ones back to the owner, so that will likely mean we lose a few, still running 348 in the mob (apparently sheep all live to die of mysterious causes, not been my experience)

I called in at the Grain Co. on my way past to see if anyone could tell me a price for "feed" oats and ended up buying a lump of rock salt instead, threw it out (looks like a leg of mutton) and the cattle seemed quite keen on it.
 

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