I'm sorry then Rod I don't understand your earlier comment about the feet of the cattle tearing up the grass around the feeders.
I'm not entirely sold on this bale grazing theory with no feeders yet. I think it's one of those things you really have to think on and pencil out on your own operation. I believe it produces excellent pasture the next year but purecountry you are not comparing like to like. To say the grass produced is better than your native pasture or the neighbours pasture is not comparing like to like. I would like you to consider bale feeding with and without feeders - there will be a maximum level of potential nutrients (the ones contained in the hay)returning to the land whether you use feeders or not. By putting it all through a cows stomach you will achieve more harvestable gain in body condition or maintanence in cows which is why we are feeding cows by the way. If all the hay is consumed from feeders and all the manure returned to the pasture the effect on litter will be very similar to that of "wasting" a proportion of the feed by it being trampled into the soil. If you are managing your pastures properly you shouldn't really need an emergency supply of long fibre litter laid down - that indicates you have been over grazing.
Not suggesting you guys are guilty on the next count either but some folks have adapted the system because they are lazy - and they have not thought out the merits or actual cost of the practice.
It's a bit like swath grazing - it always amuses me how popular it has become, because it's easy. There are way more people swathgrazing on their operations than are managing their summer pastures with electric fences. It seems the attraction of mind numbing tractor work draws a lot of people to this system of "extending the grazing season" where they won't put in the brain work of planning and implementing a planned grazing system with regular cattle moves.
I'm not entirely sold on this bale grazing theory with no feeders yet. I think it's one of those things you really have to think on and pencil out on your own operation. I believe it produces excellent pasture the next year but purecountry you are not comparing like to like. To say the grass produced is better than your native pasture or the neighbours pasture is not comparing like to like. I would like you to consider bale feeding with and without feeders - there will be a maximum level of potential nutrients (the ones contained in the hay)returning to the land whether you use feeders or not. By putting it all through a cows stomach you will achieve more harvestable gain in body condition or maintanence in cows which is why we are feeding cows by the way. If all the hay is consumed from feeders and all the manure returned to the pasture the effect on litter will be very similar to that of "wasting" a proportion of the feed by it being trampled into the soil. If you are managing your pastures properly you shouldn't really need an emergency supply of long fibre litter laid down - that indicates you have been over grazing.
Not suggesting you guys are guilty on the next count either but some folks have adapted the system because they are lazy - and they have not thought out the merits or actual cost of the practice.
It's a bit like swath grazing - it always amuses me how popular it has become, because it's easy. There are way more people swathgrazing on their operations than are managing their summer pastures with electric fences. It seems the attraction of mind numbing tractor work draws a lot of people to this system of "extending the grazing season" where they won't put in the brain work of planning and implementing a planned grazing system with regular cattle moves.
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