Hayguy
Well-known member
for you folks that are bale grazing,how many day's worth do you allow them access to at one time.
Gomez said:We put about 300 to 400 bales per quarter on hilltops and knolls and let 600+ cows graze them. We plan on 40 lbs/cow/day and then move them to the next paddock with another 300 to 400 in there. This is just a guideline and open the next gate when they have cleaned it up.
We placed 3000 bales this fall and have cut all the strings in different paddocks. We have increasingly used bale grazing, but this winter we are feeding the cows all winter this way. Our retained heifer calves get bales once per week plus some pellets daily.
It sure makes chores quick. We hired out the cutting of strings @ $1/ bale.
The best thing to do is only handle the bales once. From the truck to the field and no more. We are feeding lots of two yo hay this winter.
We think our feed cost per day/cow is just over $1 per day.
Gomez said:I offered it to the 4h club but they couldnt get organized in time. I will give them more notice next year. A high school grad group did some, boys from the colony some and a local fellow the balance.
Hereford76 said:no experience bale grazing - i just don't feel like we have the right soils and enough rainfall to do it on grass here. i do think a guy could set them out on stubble and do it tho.
i got to tour the adamson brothers ranch up in that meadow lake country - it was amazing seeing the results of their bale grazing system in how they were building the soils and improving the pastures.
Hereford76 said:no experience bale grazing - i just don't feel like we have the right soils and enough rainfall to do it on grass here. i do think a guy could set them out on stubble and do it tho.
i got to tour the adamson brothers ranch up in that meadow lake country - it was amazing seeing the results of their bale grazing system in how they were building the soils and improving the pastures.
gcreekrch said:Hereford76 said:no experience bale grazing - i just don't feel like we have the right soils and enough rainfall to do it on grass here. i do think a guy could set them out on stubble and do it tho.
i got to tour the adamson brothers ranch up in that meadow lake country - it was amazing seeing the results of their bale grazing system in how they were building the soils and improving the pastures.
That's the only place east of here that I thought I could live at.Beautiful ranch and a darn good set of cows. :wink:
Hereford76 said:gcreekrch said:Hereford76 said:no experience bale grazing - i just don't feel like we have the right soils and enough rainfall to do it on grass here. i do think a guy could set them out on stubble and do it tho.
i got to tour the adamson brothers ranch up in that meadow lake country - it was amazing seeing the results of their bale grazing system in how they were building the soils and improving the pastures.
That's the only place east of here that I thought I could live at.Beautiful ranch and a darn good set of cows. :wink:
i remember on the way up there when i turned north thru north battleford, poured rain that whole stretch, that i was eventually going to run into mountains... just from all the trees. never did. when those two brothers were beebopping us around on their place we came into this 40 acre clearing or maybe it was 80 or more... one of those two brothers said his old man cleared it with an axe by hand. i kinda chuckled thinking he was kidding. it must have taken forever. the two brothers and another local were touring us that place. we got out with a bigger group of cows in grass like i've never seen before say an hour before the sun was going to set. it was nuts... as the sun began to set the cows just congregated in an attempt to protect themselves from the bugs. we weren't that far from the pickup but i couldn't make it back fast enough... i'm sure they chuckled a little, but i thought they would eat me alive. crazy how different the county can be from here to there. one of the funnest and most memorable trips i've ever had. the did have some nice red angus cows for sure.