Thought I would bring this up one more time:
My contractor neighbor rented out pasture this summer. $30/month/per cow? That is pretty well the going rate although there are higher total income renting to guys running grass cattle....so $1/day to feed a cow for the summer?
Now you feed a cow in the winter. Say 22 lbs hay and about 12 lbs. straw? Maybe a bit more straw. I think that ration will work well for a mid sized cow?
We landed hay in the yard for 3 cents a pound and valued the straw at 1.5 cents? Maybe that is high?
So 66 cents for hay and 18 cents for straw or 84 cents/day? Now of course you have some sort of cost to feed that, but doubtful if it is more than 16 cents/day?
So bottom line is whether winter or summer...it costs about a $1/day?
Now bare with me here...I'm coming to a point! Actually grassfarmer got me thinking along these lines!
The cow eating your grass, returns a part of what she eats back to the pasture in the form of urine and manure? I think beef today had that pegged at a value of $31? I would assume the cow in winter also returns that $31?
So if you fed in the winter at a total cost of $1 X 182.5 days you would have a fed cost of $182.5 minus $31, or $151.50? You are actually adding $31 worth of nutrients to your land with bought feed? Nutrients that never came out of the land in the first place?
My point is this: Do you really make more money extending the grazing period? Or does it make more sense to eat that grass off earlier and winter feed longer? From an economic standpoint...not from how easy it is or how lazy you can be?
My contractor neighbor rented out pasture this summer. $30/month/per cow? That is pretty well the going rate although there are higher total income renting to guys running grass cattle....so $1/day to feed a cow for the summer?
Now you feed a cow in the winter. Say 22 lbs hay and about 12 lbs. straw? Maybe a bit more straw. I think that ration will work well for a mid sized cow?
We landed hay in the yard for 3 cents a pound and valued the straw at 1.5 cents? Maybe that is high?
So 66 cents for hay and 18 cents for straw or 84 cents/day? Now of course you have some sort of cost to feed that, but doubtful if it is more than 16 cents/day?
So bottom line is whether winter or summer...it costs about a $1/day?
Now bare with me here...I'm coming to a point! Actually grassfarmer got me thinking along these lines!
The cow eating your grass, returns a part of what she eats back to the pasture in the form of urine and manure? I think beef today had that pegged at a value of $31? I would assume the cow in winter also returns that $31?
So if you fed in the winter at a total cost of $1 X 182.5 days you would have a fed cost of $182.5 minus $31, or $151.50? You are actually adding $31 worth of nutrients to your land with bought feed? Nutrients that never came out of the land in the first place?
My point is this: Do you really make more money extending the grazing period? Or does it make more sense to eat that grass off earlier and winter feed longer? From an economic standpoint...not from how easy it is or how lazy you can be?
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