Almost every piece of agri-drone content in Ireland and the UK is written with arable farming in mind — cereal spraying, crop monitoring, disease detection. It's understandable: that's where the technology got started. But Ireland is a grassland farming country. Roughly 90% of Irish agricultural land is under grass, and beef and dairy dominate the national herd. If drones are going to matter for Irish farming, they need to work for the Irish farmer — and that means working on grass.
The good news is that drones have genuinely compelling applications for Irish cattle and dairy farmers, several of which are legal today and practically achievable with off-the-shelf equipment. This article covers them all.
Grass Measurement: The Foundation of Irish Farm Profitability
Ask any Teagasc advisor what the single biggest driver of dairy and beef farm profitability is, and they'll say grass utilisation. Getting maximum value from grass grown — rather than feeding expensive concentrates to compensate for poor grass management — is the central efficiency lever on Irish livestock farms.
Grass measurement underpins grass management. You can't manage what you can't measure. The traditional tools — plate meter walking, C-Dax pasture reader on a quad — are accurate but time-consuming. On a 120-cow dairy farm with 50+ paddocks, a weekly grass walk takes 2–3 hours that many farmers simply don't have.
How Multispectral Drones Measure Grass
A drone equipped with a multispectral camera — such as the DJI Mavic 3 Multispectral or the Micasense RedEdge series — captures reflected light from crop canopies across multiple wavelengths simultaneously. The key indices for grass are:
- NDVI (Normalised Difference Vegetation Index): The most widely used index for vegetation density. In grass, NDVI correlates with herbage mass — dense, actively growing swards show higher NDVI values than grazed-out or stressed areas.
- NDRE (Normalised Difference Red Edge): More sensitive to chlorophyll content than NDVI. Useful for detecting nitrogen stress in grass — a common issue on Irish farms where N applications need to be timed precisely.
- LAI (Leaf Area Index): Derived from multispectral data, LAI estimates the density of leaf coverage and correlates with biomass in calibrated models.
The practical output is a colour-coded farm map showing grass cover variation across every paddock — generated in minutes from a flight that covers a 50-hectare farm in under 20 minutes. This map can be used directly in grazing planning software to allocate paddocks to the rotation and time grazings optimally.
Drone vs Plate Meter: How Do They Compare?
The honest comparison matters. Multispectral drone measurement of grass is not a direct replacement for plate meter walking in terms of absolute accuracy at paddock level. Plate meters, walked properly, give better per-paddock precision for weekly grass budgeting.
Where drones win is:
- Speed: A 20-minute flight vs 2–3 hours walking — particularly on large fragmented farms
- Spatial resolution: Drone data shows within-paddock variation that a walking average misses — the wet corner, the compacted gateway, the nitrogen response variation
- Consistency: Drone flights are conducted at the same height and speed every time — removing the human variability in plate meter pressure and walking speed
- Frequency: You're more likely to measure grass weekly if it takes 20 minutes than if it takes 3 hours
- Historical data: Over seasons, your drone flights build a spatial performance database for every paddock — identifying consistently underperforming areas that warrant investigation
The practical recommendation: use drone multispectral data for farm-level overview and trend monitoring, and supplement with targeted plate meter readings for weekly grazing allocation decisions. The two tools are complementary, not competing.
Nitrogen Response Mapping
One of the highest-value drone applications on Irish dairy farms is nitrogen response mapping — identifying where applied N is working and where it isn't.
Post-application NDRE flights (typically 14–21 days after N application) reveal the spatial variation in grass response across the farm. Areas showing poor NDRE response despite receiving N indicate possible drainage issues, soil pH problems, compaction, or potassium deficiency. Areas showing strong response confirm that N is being used efficiently.
This data has direct value for next-season fertiliser planning — variable-rate N applications based on historic response maps could reduce total N use on Irish farms by 10–15% without reducing grass production in responding areas, while improving the accuracy of the application. Under the Nitrates Action Programme, demonstrating evidence-based variable rate N management is increasingly relevant to compliance and inspection readiness.
Rush, Dock and Thistle Mapping: Precision Spot Treatment
Weed pressure in Irish permanent pasture — particularly rushes, docks, and thistles — costs livestock farmers significantly in reduced grass utilisation and carrying capacity. The traditional management approach (blanket herbicide application or manual spot spraying) is either imprecise and expensive, or labour-intensive.
Drone mapping offers a middle path: a high-resolution RGB or multispectral flight identifies weed-infested areas precisely, generating a prescription map that shows exactly where infestation exists and at what density. This map can then guide either:
- Targeted tractor-boom application with section control or variable rate equipment
- Targeted manual or knapsack treatment of mapped hotspots
- When Irish drone spraying regulations change: direct drone application to identified weed patches only
Studies in the UK show that precision-guided herbicide application for pasture weeds can reduce herbicide use by 40–60% compared to blanket treatment, while achieving comparable or better weed control. The mapping is legal now. The precision spraying component awaits the Irish regulatory change.
Livestock Monitoring: Finding and Counting
Irish beef and suckler farms often operate on large, rough acreages — upland commonage, hillside farms, farms with significant hedgerow networks and poor visibility across the holding. Locating stock, checking for calving cows, finding strays or injured animals, and conducting livestock counts all take significant labour time.
Drones equipped with thermal cameras or high-resolution RGB cameras can cover ground that takes hours on foot in minutes from the air. Specific applications with real Irish relevance:
Thermal drone flights around calving paddocks can identify cows that are calving or have recently calved from a distance and without disturbance. Finding a cow that has calved in a far corner of a large field at night is a real labour problem on Irish farms — thermal drone surveillance covers this in minutes.
Accurate stock counts across multiple paddocks or on extensive farms are time-consuming and prone to error. A drone flight with high-resolution video can count cattle across an entire farm holding in under 30 minutes, with footage available for review if a count seems low.
For farmers with sheep or cattle on mountain commonage, drone surveillance is transformative. Locating animals on rough upland terrain is physically demanding and potentially hazardous. A drone covers the same ground from the road in a fraction of the time.
Thermal imaging can identify animals with elevated body temperature — a potential early indicator of infection — in a herd without the stress of gathering. This is not a diagnostic tool, but it can flag individuals for closer inspection before clinical signs are visible.
Peatland and ACRES Actions: The Environmental Opportunity
Ireland's ACRES (Agri-Climate Rural Environment Scheme) is the largest agri-environment scheme in Irish farming history, with significant payments available for habitat management, biodiversity actions, and water quality improvements. Many ACRES actions require baseline mapping and ongoing monitoring of habitats, water features, and biodiversity indicators.
Drone mapping is directly relevant to several ACRES requirements:
- Habitat mapping: High-resolution drone imagery can identify and map habitat types (wet grassland, scrub, heath, peatland) for baseline ACRES submissions
- Rush mapping: Some ACRES actions require evidence of rush or invasive species management — drone imagery provides auditable spatial evidence
- Water feature monitoring: Drone surveys of rivers, streams, and wetlands on the farm support riparian buffer zone management actions
- Woodland and hedgerow assessment: Tree canopy mapping supports native woodland and hedgerow actions
The connection between drone data and scheme compliance documentation is genuinely underexplored in Ireland. As ACRES monitoring and reporting requirements develop, drone-gathered spatial data may become valuable — even required — as evidence of action.
Cover Crop Seeding by Drone
Post-harvest cover crop establishment is a growing practice on Irish tillage farms and is included in several ACRES and Green Deal-aligned actions. The challenge is getting cover crops established quickly after harvest — ideally into standing stubble before it's ploughed — to maximise soil cover over winter.
Drone seeding (using a spreading hopper system like the DJI T40's 50kg spreader) allows cover crop seed to be broadcast over standing stubble immediately after combine harvest, before any cultivation. The combination of even seed distribution and no soil disturbance maximises germination in the residual harvest moisture. This is legal today under the granular spreading framework.
Getting Started: What a Cattle Farmer Needs
For a beef or dairy farmer looking to start using drone technology on their farm today, the entry point is significantly lower than for a spraying operation:
- For basic RGB monitoring and stock counting: A DJI Mavic 3 Pro or similar consumer-grade drone (€2,000–€3,500) is sufficient. Register with the IAA, complete your A2 CofC, and you're operational.
- For multispectral grass mapping: The DJI Mavic 3 Multispectral (~€5,500) is the most accessible multispectral platform. Requires PIX4Dfields or similar software (€200–€400/year).
- For thermal livestock monitoring: A drone with thermal payload such as the DJI Mavic 3 Thermal (~€4,000) or DJI M30T (€8,000+). The higher-end platforms provide better thermal resolution.
- For cover crop seeding: Requires a larger spreading-capable agri-drone platform (DJI T40 or similar at €28,000+). Better suited to farmers sharing investment with a neighbour or a contractor service model.
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