per
Well-known member
Denny said:WyomingRancher said:per said:Not trying here to convince any of you of anything, just adding food for thought. Having a mini lab on the tailgate of the pickup is fun and empowering. Knowing when the sugars are up in the plant can affect when you cut hay. You can make good feed better just by knowing when to cut it. If you are using any sort of amendment from mainstream fert to fish to manure you can test which will work best and adjust the timing using an EC meter. Raising the brix by a half a point can mean the hoppers or lygas will prefer your neighbors crop to yours. Knowing which parricide's and when the timing affects dung beetles can make a huge difference in nutrient cycling in a natural system. There are tidbits from PureCountries world that could make most systems better. Having a working knowledge of the different biology can mean the difference between aerobic and anaerobic compost. Little, easy, inexpensive things can make a difference to the bottom line.
It would be nice to harvest hay at optimal nutrition. The reality here is to get it put up when you can between break downs, other jobs, and weather delays.
Amen to that.
I put up 700 acres of hay mostly by myself from mid june until early september some times later.In a perfect world maybe but I'm not there yet.
I understand about putting up hay and acres and restraints and all of that. We have the same issues. I do however keep track of the hay that was cut at an optimum time and keep most of it separate to be used in a time when a higher plane of nutrition is warranted. Not all of us are those small hippie dope smoking stuck in the sixties folks that were mentioned earlier. I also hate going to the farmers markets and just like being a producer. Take the tidbits and use them to your advantage. Discard the rest. This knowledge could be your unfair advantage.

If it sounds like there is any edge in what I wrote, there wasn't. I just enjoy the conversation and topic. Please don't take any offence.
