Lets try again.
Was running some figures today on our system of
feeding everything on pasture with the use of silage
bunks/feed rings and portable windbreaks and
wondering how it compares to those using bale
grazing systems.
My figures per head/per day fed came out to:
Tractor ownership, repairs, depreciation and
insurance - 7.5c/day (probably overstated and this
allocates total cost to the cattle feeding operation)
Fuel - 3.5c/day
Silage wagon ownership/repair - 1c/day
Feed bunk/feed ring/windbreak inventory - 1.5c/day
Heating quonset for tractor - 1.5c/day
Labor @$20/hour - 19c/day
For a total of 34c/day.
Looking at these figures a couple of things struck me.
1. What a good investment feed rings/bunks are
relative to the feed wastage they save. Makes me
really question any system of feeding on the ground
without some type of feeder.
2. The only real significant difference between
feeding daily or bale grazing type systems is the labor
component and I'm not even sure that difference is as
real as it looks.
The other costs are easy because they are cash costs
- labor isn't so simple unless I'm paying someone
$20/hr to feed cows. In some ways it could be seen
as more of a lifestyle choice than a real financial
difference. If I spend 3 hours a day feeding cows and
allocate myself $60 for that then move to a system
where I feed for 1 hour a day I'm not $40 a day better
off - I just have 2 hours more spare time on my
hands. So unless you are freeing up time that you use
to make money doing something else I question if
there is even a difference worth taking about in
financial terms anyway between bale grazing or
hauling feed to animals.
Was running some figures today on our system of
feeding everything on pasture with the use of silage
bunks/feed rings and portable windbreaks and
wondering how it compares to those using bale
grazing systems.
My figures per head/per day fed came out to:
Tractor ownership, repairs, depreciation and
insurance - 7.5c/day (probably overstated and this
allocates total cost to the cattle feeding operation)
Fuel - 3.5c/day
Silage wagon ownership/repair - 1c/day
Feed bunk/feed ring/windbreak inventory - 1.5c/day
Heating quonset for tractor - 1.5c/day
Labor @$20/hour - 19c/day
For a total of 34c/day.
Looking at these figures a couple of things struck me.
1. What a good investment feed rings/bunks are
relative to the feed wastage they save. Makes me
really question any system of feeding on the ground
without some type of feeder.
2. The only real significant difference between
feeding daily or bale grazing type systems is the labor
component and I'm not even sure that difference is as
real as it looks.
The other costs are easy because they are cash costs
- labor isn't so simple unless I'm paying someone
$20/hr to feed cows. In some ways it could be seen
as more of a lifestyle choice than a real financial
difference. If I spend 3 hours a day feeding cows and
allocate myself $60 for that then move to a system
where I feed for 1 hour a day I'm not $40 a day better
off - I just have 2 hours more spare time on my
hands. So unless you are freeing up time that you use
to make money doing something else I question if
there is even a difference worth taking about in
financial terms anyway between bale grazing or
hauling feed to animals.
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