The boy has been shopping around for some hay and has come to the conclusion they want too much for it. He has enough rained on stuff for about 12 lbs. a day for 195 days, which is generally how long we feed. He figures it is cheaper to feed whole barley and straw to round out the ration. I told him I want $2.25/bu. for the barley. Of course it is right in the yard so no trucking involved. We have a ton of straw and it is good stuff...baled right behind the combine with a chaff saver laying it on top of the swath. Quite a bit of green chickweed it it!
He is thinking he can away with 12 lbs. hay, 9 lbs. of whole barley and lots of straw. So in that 70 cent range(hay valued at 2.5 cents/lb) plus the straw? I told him I believe he could cut the barley back quite a bit, more like 5 lbs. but we will see. He is going to get some feed tests done and run the whole thing before a nutritionalist.
We made a decision this spring to move the calving dates back to April 1! We had intended to sell them and not many people want to be calving cows in January anymore! So I guess he will get to calve cows in the slop!
He said most hay was still priced in that $30-35 range and trucking would bring it up too high to compete with barley. I told him that things might change and hay could drop?
It is pretty hard for guys who have been getting higher prices to realize they have to drop the price or they might get stuck with their hay?
Meanwhile my hay dealer continues to move the square bales out in a fairly timely manner to the horse crowd and I'm still netting in that $3 range for a 60 lb. bale! Which works out close to 5 cents/lb.
He is thinking he can away with 12 lbs. hay, 9 lbs. of whole barley and lots of straw. So in that 70 cent range(hay valued at 2.5 cents/lb) plus the straw? I told him I believe he could cut the barley back quite a bit, more like 5 lbs. but we will see. He is going to get some feed tests done and run the whole thing before a nutritionalist.
We made a decision this spring to move the calving dates back to April 1! We had intended to sell them and not many people want to be calving cows in January anymore! So I guess he will get to calve cows in the slop!
He said most hay was still priced in that $30-35 range and trucking would bring it up too high to compete with barley. I told him that things might change and hay could drop?
It is pretty hard for guys who have been getting higher prices to realize they have to drop the price or they might get stuck with their hay?
Meanwhile my hay dealer continues to move the square bales out in a fairly timely manner to the horse crowd and I'm still netting in that $3 range for a 60 lb. bale! Which works out close to 5 cents/lb.
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