littlejoe
Well-known member
Actually, yrlgs pretty easy to handle if you mechanize it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NA-ST8nXl4U
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NA-ST8nXl4U
AMENeatbeef said:I would love to be paying the prices a few of you are mentioning. There is pasture going for any where from 20 to 50 an acre in alot of areas in Kansas and Nebraska. If the pastures are cross fenced and rotated it works but there are damn sodbusting farmers that have 100 cows that are paying 50 an acre for pasture that takes 6 to 8 acres for a 5 to 6 month grazing season. Most of them dont care and dont know damn thing about grazing so the pastures get overgrazed. Have some rented dryland ground that we have sudan and alfalfa on and some no good s.o.b. came in and offered to pay over 100 per acre rent to our landlord. This is ground usually raises 2 to 3 ton of hay on the sudan acres and 4 ton of hay on the alfalfa. Grain prices are making things almost impossible for cattlemen in our area, unless you have alot of farm ground to go along with the cattle. Hell cant even hardly get stalks rented in the winter because they are to worried about the compaction and affecting next years yields.