Silicon Ranch deployed a commercial utility-scale solar farm with moving panels that allow cattle to graze underneath. The installation represents a practical approach to dual land use, maximizing agricultural productivity while generating renewable energy on the same acreage. Moving panels track the sun's position throughout the day, creating sufficient ground clearance for livestock to move freely beneath the structure. This agrivoltaics model addresses a real tension in energy development. Fixed solar arrays typically consume land unsuitable for farming. Dynamic panel systems maintain that flexibility. The farm demonstrates that renewable energy infrastructure doesn't require abandoning existing agricultural operations. Silicon Ranch installed cattle tracking technology to monitor herd movements and health under the panels. The data helps operators optimize both solar generation and grazing patterns. The project proves the concept works at commercial scale. Ranchers get continued pasture income. Energy producers get utility-scale output on land that remains productive. Neither industry sacrifices completely for the other. This beats the false choice between energy development and agriculture that often dominates land use debates.