19
RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING

FIRST YEAR OF OPERATIONKevin Heaton

Utah State University ExtensionKane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Page 2: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Introduction

• Utah ranches spread across thousands of acres in remote areas

• Monitoring stock water is challenging and costly• Winter 09-10 survey of participating ranchers

indicated that on average ranchers:– spend 22.6 hours per month checking water– drive 375 miles per month checking water– spend $526.40 per month checking water

Page 3: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Cost Saving Technology

• Solar powered, satellite radio stock water monitor (SWM)

Antenna

Solar Panel

Battery

Satellite Radio

Computer Board

Pressure Transducer

Page 4: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties
Page 5: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

SWM Cost• Monitor $1,800• Installation $100• Website Service Fee $3-10/month

Page 6: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Demonstration• Installed 15 monitors from November ‘09 to

June ‘10• Five ranchers from each of the following

counties participated– Kane– Garfield – Washington

• Seven full-time ranchers• Eight part-time ranchers

Page 7: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Demo (cont)• Ranch size ranged from 80 to over 1,000 head– Seven ranchers own > 300 head– Eight ranchers own < 300 head

• Installation locations ranged – 15-200 miles from the base operation– from 3,500 ft to 7,000 ft elevation

• Ten ranchers monitor storage tank water levels which feed a trough(s), the other five ranchers monitor trough water levels

• Most ranchers only use their stock water monitor on winter pastures

Page 8: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

SWM Data Example Graph

Page 9: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Rancher Evaluations• Ranchers used the monitors

an average of 7 months, ranged from 4-12 months

• Cost savings of $165/month, ranged from $40-500/month

• Time savings averaged 11 hours/month, ranged from 4-24 hours/month

• 63% of ranchers checked the website daily

Page 10: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

• SWM performed as programmed 88% of the time

• 100% of ranchers indicated “the SWM were reliable enough to make management decisions”

• 100% wanted to continue to use the SWM

• 45% used the internet for the first time to collect and manage data on their operation

Rancher Evaluations (cont)

Page 11: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Rancher Evaluations (cont)• When asked, “Based on your experience with

the monitor and assuming you don’t have one, would you purchase a SWM?”

• Only 63% said, “Yes”• The other 37% responded, “No” or “Maybe”,

the reasons:– Upfront costs are high in comparison to the savings– Upfront costs are excessive for an unproven,

experimental monitor– Too risky due to the possibility of vandalism

Page 12: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Problem SWM – Unreliable Reporting

Page 13: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Problem SWM – Low Battery

Changed battery

Week cloudy weather

Page 14: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Problem SWM – Data Spikes

Mounted antenna to top of

tank

Page 15: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Pressure Sensor Going Bad

Page 16: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Rancher Undoing Everything to See Why It Works

Page 17: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Vandalism -- Every Rancher’s Concern

Page 18: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties

Summary• Overall, remote stock water monitors are

feasible, reliable and cost effective for many ranchers

• Adoption by ranchers who have– Unreliable or– Intensively managed systems

• Approved in Arizona as an NRCS Conservation Practice, i.e. EQIP cost sharing

Page 19: RANCHERS EVALUATE REMOTE STOCK WATER MONITORS DURING FIRST YEAR OF OPERATION Kevin Heaton Utah State University Extension Kane, Garfield & Washington Counties