How do burrs get spread?

Here’s a classic-

As I mentioned in an earlier comment, I got a new camera today. I headed to the mountains south of Pocatello to try it out and came back with a disgusting photo (as well as some attractive landscapes).

cow-w-weed-seeds
Pretty much all the cows looked more or less like this poor critter on the Caribou National Forest. Every year on this grazing allotment there are more burrs, and I think we see the explanation. Photo copyright Ralph Maughan, but permission to repost is granted with my credit

24 thoughts on “How do burrs get spread?

  1. Is that from houndstongue? I killed a whitetail buck in MT several years ago that looked like that from houndstongue. It took us about 5 years to get that nasty weed down to a manageable level on the place.

  2. Most seeds are eaten by ungulates if they have ancestoral training…and the functional extended family is made up of all the ages and sexes. A lot of plants don’t even get to seed stage if the grazers are very knowledgable.

    My infrastructured buffalo eat a lot of DYC’s flower heads (damn yellow composites) just at the stage where the flower is withering and the seed is starting to form up. I can guarentee that black angus Ralph is picturing doesn’t have a clue they can eat the seed heads now being a bother to it.

  3. Perhaps running that rancher through about ten miles of that range in his stocking feet and at the point of a pitchfork would be a good start to controlling the burrs.

  4. Ralph was that look the cow gave you followed up with aggressive action? That looks like one pissed off cow. I hope your had your pepper spray handy. (Dave I am sorry I couldn’t resist)

  5. Tom Page,

    Yes it is houndstongue. If you walk through the area your pants will soon look like that too. It has spread all over the cow area.

    Downstream, a mile or so the ranger district has a “beauty zone” along Mink Creek. There is no grazing and no houndstongue, and the tall perennial grasses even in mid-Sept. are still somewhat green and would not support much of a fire.

  6. Linda Hunter,

    The cow was just embarrassed I think. There were 3 others foraging along the road. They knew I was up to no good. It’s kind of like being caught with your pants down, and all of a sudden you’re on the Internet 😉

  7. Ralph, I don’t know the specifics on “houndstongue” but I do know a lot of supposed toxic plants out West are quite edible to grazers if they are eaten in conjunction with offsetting txic plants. The group I am with, the BEHAVE unit out of Utah State has been doing all kinds of research on this kind of thing. From Knapweed to all kinds of toxic brush. Most “toxic” plants are taken in moderation by grazers who know what they are and used to a lot of benefit…from worms etc.

  8. Nathan,

    I got a Nikon D5000. What a smooth running beast of a camera! I am impressed.

    Bob Jackson,

    I did know that some toxic plants can be balanced off with other plants and that season counts a lot too.

    I found out something about knapweed the hard way the other day. I was walking up a ridge above Pocatello. There isn’t much knapweed around here, but on top of the ridge I came upon 10 or 20 plants I could pull by hand, and I did with my bare hands.

    It took me about a half hour to get down to my truck. Meanwhile, it was getting hot and I felt itchy and scratched my wrist with my hand that had knapweed juice on it. The juice left marks that took two weeks to go away.

    Regarding houndstongue, you never see any of it eaten by anything except perhaps a few insects. It is quite an increaser too. I brought some home last year in my boot laces and they got emptied on the lawn. This year they grow in the lawn, and persisted despite the weekly mowings. I finally dug them out.

  9. Cows don’t have standing, so waiver is moot…~S~

    Ralph, more camera issues. What lens do you find necessary to use for your wildlife photos? Are you making do with something in the 300mm range, or did you spring for something in the 500 fixed mm range?

  10. JimT:

    I’m not Ralph, but I can answer your question. If you’re working mostly with large animals in the National Parks then you can get away with a 300mm–especially if you use as a 1.4x/2.0x converter and are not working with a full frame sensor.

    However, if you are shooting birds or small mammals, and/or working with a camera with a full frame sensor, a 500+mm is a must. All of these shots were taken with a 300 F/4 or 70-200 F/2.8: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jtbruskotter/sets/72157607723453086/

  11. Steve C

    I’m going to make like the cattle papariatzi and sell it to Cattle News.

    Actually I put the photo halfway into the public domain. It is for everyone’s free use, but give me credit.

  12. JimT

    I have a zoom that goes to 300mm (in the 35mm sensor format).

    I also bought a Nikon P90 with a 24x zoom! The photo quality is inferior to an SLR lens, but it does zoom out to 640 optical mm!! and with vibration stabilization. It gets OK photos and quickly whereas those with better optics are still setting up when the subject of their photos (wildlife) has moved out of sight.

  13. I have pulled a few thousand houndstongue plants over the years, and I don’t recall one ever being chewed on.

    I would be curious to know about how the responsible agency was able to keep the houndstongue out of an area one mile away from such a heavily infested spot…we shut down all grazing in the affected area on our ranch, and we were pretty militant about spraying, pulling, and keeping the burrs in the invaded zone. We wore briar pants and hard boots to reduce our own effect, yet we still had dispersal thanks to the numerous elk, whitetail, mule deer, moose, coyotes, foxes and all the rest that moved through.

    Knapweed makes me itch too, but usually a shower within a couple hours after contact makes it go away.

  14. I must say Ralph – This is one eye-catching ugly-cow Photo!

    Kind f reminds me (the seeds) of the clouds of flies that usually surround ’em.

    Next should be a trip to Arizona to get one of a cow with Teddy bear cholla arms all over it.

  15. Because it’s a biennial (according to Weeds of the West & to MT’s noxious weed guide), houndstongue isn’t that hard to get rid of, unless you’ve got an infestation over acres and acres. I either destroy the rosette (dig the taproot) in the first year or cut & bag the seed heads in the 2nd.

    From Weeds of the West:
    Houndstongue is toxic…causing liver cells to stop reproducing. Animals may survive for six months or longer after they have consumed a lethal amount. Sheep are more resistant to houndstongue poisoning than are cattle or horses. Horses may be especially affected when confined in a small area infested with houndstongue and lacking desirable forage.

  16. Ralph,

    Remember to get a property release signed by the rancher if you sell that photo for other than editorial use. You can be sued, and successfully since the brand is clearly visible so the property is identifiable. Editorial use is exempt by law.

  17. Jeff,

    Thanks for your advice, but I want to reiterate what is in the caption under the photo. I have put this photo in the public domain, retaining only the right that I get photo credit. There can be no sale of the photo.

    The cow is on public property and the brand is neither clearly visible nor identifiable to anyone in the general public.

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