Cattle Grazing and Wildfire Fuels

Fire scorched ground near barbed wire fence

Cattle Grazing and Wildfire Fuels

Thursday, April 20, 2023
8:00 am to 4:00 pm

Location:

Little Farm located at
Tilden Nature Area Environmental Educational Center

1500 Central Park Drive, Berkeley, CA

This workshop will provide the latest research on cattle grazing and fire behavior.  Our panelist- fire fighters, ranchers, and land managers- will discuss challenges and opportunities to use cattle grazing for fuels reduction. We will also consider how to balance fuel reduction with other management goals including water quality, habitat, and ranch economics.  During our field tour we will visit sites along the Nimitz Trail. This trail goes between Tilden Park (ungrazed since the 1930s) and Wildcat Canyon Park (continuously grazed by cattle in recent history). This location is study of several studies on shrub encroachment and we will hear from Dr. Joe McBride (professor emeritus at UCB and author of papers on shrub encroachment at Tilden Park).  We will also view a site where goats were used to manage vegetation. Differences between cattle and goat grazing for fuels management will be discussed.

Felix Ratcliff Rangeland Conservation Scientist
LD Ford, Consultants in Rangeland Conservation Science
Grey Hayes Cal Poly
Dina Robertson East Bay Regional Park District Wildland Vegetation Program Manager
Rowan Peterson UC Davis Graduate Student, CCRC Forum Scholar
Roxanne Foss Vollmar Natural Lands Consulting
Paul Silva Rancher, grazing tenant at Crocket Hills Regional Park, and Contra Costa County Fire Department Battalion Chief
Jeff Wiedemann Rancher and grazing tenant at Bishop Ranch Open Space
Collin Gallagher East Bay Regional Park District Fire Captain
Allison Rofe East Bay Regional Park District Rangeland Specialist
Jim Mohring Grazing tenant at Wildcat Canyon Regional Park
Joe McBride UC Berkeley Professor Emeritus of Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning

Meeting Agenda

List of Attendees, non-harvestable

Shrub Encroachment in Tilden Park. Historical, ecological, and management considerations

Presentation: Cattle grazing to manage wildfire
fuels in California rangelands

Grazing Reduces Shrub Encroachment

Presentation: How much to graze to reduce fire hazards

Cattle grazing reduces fuel and leads to more manageable fire behavior


Source URL: https://ucanr.edu/site/central-coast-rangeland-coalition/cattle-grazing-and-wildfire-fuels