Missouri Grazing Schools is a major program effort by the University of Missouri Extension and Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to educate livestock farmers and ranchers across Missouri on how to increase profitability with no negative environmental impact on the land.
The focus is to enhance soil, water, and forage resources in Missouri operations by teaching the concepts of Management-intensive Grazing (MiG). Manure is better distributed, grass resources are preserved, soil health is improved, animal production is increased, and less soil is exposed to erosion. In addition, the need for expensive inputs is reduced, and profitability increases.
The instruction involves understanding the soil resource, plant growth, forage quality, forage options for various classes of livestock, nutritional needs of livestock, design and layout of a grazing system, proper fence building, developing water sources, and the economics of MiG. Participants evaluate pastures for forage availability and species composition. These skills directly translate to their ability to identify these resources on their farms and to design grazing system layouts that fit their livestock operations.
Daily Schedule:
- August 9-10 (8am-5pm)
- August 11 (8am-12pm)
Drinks, snacks, and lunches provided with registration.
Dress appropriately for farm visits.
For questions or to register, call the Howell County Extension Office at 417-256-2391.

Related programs
- Agricultural Business and Policy Extension
- Annie’s Project
- Beef Extension
- Dairy Extension
- Drought Resources
- Forage-Livestock Group
- Forages
- Manure Management
- Missouri 4-H
- Missouri AgrAbility
- Missouri Beginning Farmers and Ranchers
- Missouri Century Farms
- MU/MDC Native Grass Extension Project
- NRCS + MU Grasslands Project
- Nutrient Management
- Pasture Precision Program
- Pasture-Based Dairy
- Pearls of Production
- Plant Diagnostic Clinic
- Veterinary Extension and Continuing Education
- Weed Science Extension