• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Expansion?

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #21
    I've never grown crops to sell - only to feed livestock. Kale,fodder **** and oats for silage. I understand any producers enjoyment of rearing a good crop whether it be grain, grass or calves - I just can't see how it can apply to a grain crop and not a grass crop? What problem do you see that makes you think you need to "break up these heavy clay/loam soils every once in awhile and replant?"

    Comment


      #22
      grassfarmer: As I've said before I'm still learning a lot about grass? The land we fenced off and cell grazed seems to have worked fairly well. It seems in normal grazing situations around here the grass has a tendency to revert to a native fescue(June grass) which really doesn't produce a heavy volume. I guess we'll see if the pasture mix in the cells retains its diversity or if the fescue pushes out the other grass?
      I don't see us taking this cell grazing much further as it simply takes too much time! Let me explain that? If we are busy doing something it is a pain to go and make sure everything is going fine. It is so much easier to kick them into a big pasture and check them once a week! I am especially not impressed with these little electric fences! Don't like them, never will!
      Nothing more frustrating than having to come home to put the darned cows back in when you have a job to do somewhere else? Wind blows a tree over onto a fence, two cows get fighting, darned moose spooks them through the fence...that sort of thing!

      Comment


        #23
        Cowman, " I guess we'll see if the pasture mix in the cells retains its diversity or if the fescue pushes out the other grass?" - that is entirely in your control. There is a lot more to managed grazing than setting up electric fences. Any pasture that declines in productivity and in species diversity is a pasture poorly managed(severe drought excepted) The challenge is to learn enough about grass and grass management to move your pastures the other way. I am constantly amazed at how little I know about grass management - it is a never ending quest for knowledge. 2004 and 2005 have been a great opportunity to improve pasture health and diversity in Central Alberta.
        The time issue depends how much money you want to make by improving grass management. I am currently grazing off some pastures that were monocultures of 1/8th inch high bluegrass with patches of wild strawberries and *****toes in 2000. Under a previous zero management system they had probably yielded 20AUDs per acre annually. Today these same pastures are knee deep fescue,bluegrass,smooth brome, timothy, red-clover, sweet clover, alfalfa which easily yields 80AUDs per acre. Intensive grazing management has been the only change here, no re-seeding, no fertiliser, no manure hauling.
        In this case it takes me 30 minutes to move fences every second day making 4 acre paddocks. Valueing an AUD on this excellent pasture at $1 means my 30 minutes spent has earned me $240 (60 AUD's extra on 4 acres) What are you doing that earns you more than $480 an hour?

        Comment


          #24
          I'm with cowman on this one, moving fences daily isn't my favorite way of spending the grazing season.
          Moving cows from pasture to pasture once a week or so, where they have a reliable source of water, minerals in leech proof containers in all pastures and good fences works well here.
          The local general store is selling some dinky little push in fence posts for electric fences, I had a chuckle with the feedlot fellow down the road the other day, about how long that fence would last if one bull decided to rub against it for half a minute before he got a shock !!!

          Good for you grassfarmer for using grazing methods that work in your operation, whatever works is what producers should use. There isn't a right way or a wrong way to do things. Nobody knows more than the other person about grazing management, and what I do here has worked on this farm for over 30 years.

          Comment


            #25
            Emrald1, You can have a "reliable source of water, minerals in leech proof containers in all pastures and good fences" under a daily move system too.
            Bulls rubbing on electric fences isn't an issue - it's a misunderstanding of how electric fences work. They are a phsycologic barrier not a physical one - I have run seperate bull/cow groups seperated with a single strand high tensile fence. I've had more trouble with neighbours trashing good 4 strand barb fences than I've had with electric.
            I don't know if the comment "Nobody knows more than the other person about grazing management" is scolding me for being a smart@$# it certainly is a nonsensical comment as there are huge differences between peoples knowledge of grazing management. I don't pretend to know it all but I do read, listen and learn from people that have a far greater knowledge than me. I was aiming to pass on what I have learnt to Cowman who asks questions about grazing management usually prefaced by "I don't know much about grass management but.."

            Comment


              #26
              grassfarmer, I have been in the cattle business for over 30 years and am learning something new every day. If you took offense to my comment about nobody knowing more than the other person thats your issue. I don't like to chastise others for doing something differently than I do, whether its raising a certain breed of cattle or pasturing cattle. I have never yet met anyone who knows everything....everyone that I meet in the cattle business has some valuable information to share, yourself included. That does not mean that you or I know everything !!!

              Comment


                #27
                It is amazing how this web site has turned into a gab fest for 4 or 5 people.

                Grassfarmer, when you get a minute from your slapping yourself on the back for being the best cowboy in Canada ( and not a stupid crop guy), can you tell us how you needed to increase your stocking rates and AUM's so that you could pay for your internet time? I cannot think that some of the people on this site actually work for a living!

                I am also convinced that F-S is a government mole that is trying to convince us all that big government is a good thing.

                Have a good night all! (However many as that is?)

                Comment


                  #28
                  silverback, don't underestimate the fact that some of us do work very hard and put in long hours to do so, if you notice the times of some of the posts on here you will recognize that some people get half a days work done pretty darn early in the mornings !!! I enjoy all posts on this site whether or not I agree with them or not...and find that more people are on the site in the winter and times when they are not out working for a living or harvesting or calving the cows or whatever.....

                  Gotta go because I have a 20 hour day ahead of me tomorrow, working for a living !!!! Just kidding !!!

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Well silverback, time is like money? We get to spend it how we see fit. Maybe it would be better to sit in the bar or casino or chase a ball around a golf course?
                    There aren't a lot of people on this old website anymore, and despite grassfarmers misgivings about me I do enjoy his posts for the information and his off the wall way of looking at things! He also has a wee bit of humour although he usually tries to hide it in righteous indignation!
                    Got to agree farmers son is a government agent LOL! Well he has his ideas and they reflect what the majority of Albertans probably think? I find he is very informative and very dogged in his pursuit of his opinions?
                    Emerald has some pretty strong opinions herself and I can just bet she was a tough lady to deal with when she sat on municipal council?
                    In the big picture though the value of any discussion is that you learn how others think? I am a firm believer every person I meet or talk to has something to teach me...whether it be a millionaire or the bum in the street! In fact the bums' story might be a lot more interesting?

                    Comment


                      #30
                      Something about intensive grazing with no inputs is bothering me. A question for grass farmer, how sustainable do you think intensive grazing actually is? You are continually clipping the grass with out putting anything back in the soil. Sure the grass is rested before it is grazed, but if you are getting that many grazing days off your land without putting any "new" material back into the soil, one would think you would wear it out after a while. Sure they crap on the land, but that "crap" was already part of the soil at one time, and you are actually taking matter away from your soil everytime you sell one of your cows to a feedlot. In the short term intensive grazing with no fertilizer/fiber inputs may work well, but how about the long term?

                      Comment

                      • Reply to this Thread
                      • Return to Topic List
                      Working...