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Disaster Clause

UNL extension educator stresses including a clause for natural disasters in your grazing lease.

The two most important components of a grazing lease agreement are stocking rate and lease rate, according to Jay Jenkins, University of Nebraska–Lincoln (UNL) extension educator in Cherry County.

According to Jenkins, balancing the forage demanded by the animals with the amount of forage grown is the most important part of proper grazing management. Too much grazing pressure leads to decreased long-term forage production.

Jay Jenkins

Jay Jenkins

Plainly stating the stocking rate in the lease agreement helps avoid disagreements and provides landowners a way to reach their goals for rangeland health.

Stocking rate can be expressed in different ways. Sometimes it is expressed as the average number of animals during the lease period. Animal days or animal-unit days are better ways to figure stocking rate. The method you choose to express stocking rate should be clearly written in the lease agreement and discussed between all parties.

Jenkins recommends that grazing leases should include a clause that covers how grazing pressure will be reduced in response to drought or other natural disaster. Put in writing what will happen in the event that drought, hail, fire or other natural disaster reduces the amount of forage produced. Specify who will make the decision to reduce stocking rate and how the decision will be made.

The landowner often makes this decision based primarily on remaining forage available, Jenkins said. Also, he said, the lease agreement should specify how much notice is needed in the event stocking rate must be reduced. It should also cover how payment will be reduced to reflect the reduced carrying capacity.

The bottom line, according to Jenkins: Communicate early and often. When communication falters, both the rangeland and landowner-tenant relationship suffer.

He recommended an additional resource, the Pasture Rental Arrangements for Your Farm publication available in the document library at http://aglease101.org. It covers in-depth many of the steps in arriving at an equitable lease arrangement and contains a template lease form that can be used to develop an agreement. It does not specifically include a disaster clause, but it has space to add one.

For those who cannot access it online, your local extension office is happy to help.

comment on this storyEditor’s Note: This article was provided by University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension.





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