From paper notebook to one tap: A shepherd's perspective
We interviewed "Mike," a shepherd who manages 2,000 sheep across a 500‑acre solar farm in Texas. He's been grazing solar sites for seven years. For the first five, he used a waterproof paper notebook. For the last two, he's used GrazeTrace. Here's his story in his own words.
"I hated the notebook."
I've been moving sheep my whole life. When I started on solar farms, the asset manager gave me a waterproof notebook and a pencil. "Just write down which paddock and when," he said. Simple, right? Wrong.
First, I'd lose the pencil a dozen times a day. Second, my handwriting is terrible – even I couldn't read it sometimes. Third, when it rained, pages stuck together. And forget about remembering exact times. I'd finish moving 200 sheep at dusk and think, "I'll write it down when I get back to the truck." But then I'd forget. Or I'd guess. The asset manager was always calling me: "Mike, you missed three sessions last week." It was embarrassing.
Then came the audit scare. Our farm got flagged for a random IRS check. The asset manager asked me for my notebooks for the past two years. I had maybe half of them. The rest were lost or destroyed. He spent three weeks reconstructing logs from memory and texts. We barely passed – but the auditor warned us: next time, they'd penalize.
Trying the app
When the asset manager said we were switching to a mobile app, I groaned. I'm not a tech person. My phone is an old Android. But he showed me GrazeTrace. He said, "Mike, just tap 'Start' when you put sheep in, and tap 'Complete' when you move them. That's it."
I tried it on a small paddock. Open app, tap the paddock on the map, tap Start. Put phone back in my pocket. Four hours later, moved the sheep, tapped Complete. The app asked, "Flock size?" I typed 200. Done. The whole thing took maybe 10 seconds.
What really sold me was the offline part. Half our paddocks have zero signal. But the app worked anyway. I didn't have to remember to log later – I logged right there. When I got back to the barn, it synced automatically. The asset manager could see everything.
The difference it made
Now I never get those "Mike, you missed a log" calls. In fact, he barely calls me at all – except to say thanks. I save about 20 minutes a day not messing with notebooks and texts. That's more time with my sheep.
And when the next audit comes? The asset manager says he can generate a complete report in one click. No more digging through wet notebooks. No more guesswork. I feel like I'm doing my job right for the first time.
Would I go back to paper? Not a chance. I'd rather quit.
Why this story matters for asset managers
Shepherds aren't anti‑tech – they're anti‑friction. A well‑designed, offline‑first app like GrazeTrace reduces shepherd frustration, improves compliance, and eliminates the need for constant chasing. As we covered in training guide, 5 minutes of onboarding is usually enough.
Mike's story also highlights a key audit risk: paper records get lost. In audit failure cases, missing notebooks were a factor. Digital, immutable logs prevent that.
Internal linking: related resources
- Learn how to train shepherds in 5 minutes – Mike's experience shows it's easy.
- Review the 5 must‑have offline features – GrazeTrace has them all.
- See why manual logs are expensive – for asset managers, not just shepherds.
- Understand how IRS auditors view paper logs – they're skeptical.
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