John SD
Well-known member
Denny said:southwestcwby said:If you didn't get any big snow and didn't put up any hay what would a place that size run year around . I am talking strictly cattle no farming or irrigating?
Most likely 150 the grass grows fast here then it dies and the heavy fall rain's beat all the leaves off it and all you would have is stem's.Most guy's take a cutting of hay they pasture the hay fields from August 15th until its gone.Also there are no wide open spaces here and no BLM or Government land you have to make due with all private owned grond.
What guy's like you don't understand is that for every ranch that can get by on no hay or farming there's alot more that need to.I would love to not ride a tractor but here it is not practical.It snow's and it rain's in December and January some times and we get a sheet of ice on everything last winter it was 3" thick.Alot of times it makes more sense finacially to say plant corn and chop it for silage 40 acres here can put up 15 ton per acre 600 ton of silage will go along way's here.I would have about $6000 into the whole pile how much range cake would that buy?We in turn bale alot of lowground meadow hay which produces well but you cant get a cow to eat it in the summer and it would be very poor if left until fall to graze.You had better like chaseing cows because they will crawl fences before they would eat it.If you bale it they will eat it once the snow comes.We all make due with what we have it does'nt make one of us wrong or right.
To tell the truth if I had to get up every day and saddle a horse It would get old after a while.And I like rideing horse alot.
Denny, your MN winters remind me of the '96-'97 winter here. Everything was iced in from early Nov until spring. No grazing here that winter! Was more of a chore to plow out the trails and haystacks than it was to feed the hay. I got pretty good at switching from the bale unroller to the snowblower that winter. Thankfully I had a lot of hay that year and carryover from previous years. Many folks here had to buy hay and battle the weather to get it in.
Put about 300 hrs on the tractor that winter where normally I'd probably only get about 50 hrs.
I think being only being used to the arid and sunny SW climate our "new" friend might freeze off certain body parts in a northern plains winter! :wink: :lol: