katrina
Well-known member
Yeah you'll be sending me a bill for therapy............ :wink:
the real jake said:I think I know where Soapweed was coming from in he earlier post about spending the time and money at home where you benefit from it, but I respectfully disagree with that as a blanket statement.
I was on the local NRCS board until recently, and we had an award and field tour every year, and they stll do BTW. I never had one stop that I didn't learn something useful, or a new idea I thought might be worth giving a try. I know we all can't always spare the time to take in all there is to offer, or we might never get our work done, and I bet we all know a producer just like that.
I also went to a seminar sponsored by Farm Credit Services years ago, that was done by a Tom Hogan. He specialized in low input ranching ideas, and had taken several ranches from the brink of failure and brought them back to prosperity. IMO a lot of ranchers don't think about options that they have available, and just do the same program year after year. Like for instance they might have a smaller cattle herd than their machinery lineup will cash flow, but they never consider any other possibilities of changing their operation. Tom Hogan said if you didn't run 1000 cows, you shouldn't own a tractor. That was a little further then I would agree with. Maybe way down south you could get away with that.
I read Kit Pharo's newsletter, and if nothing else he provokes thought. We fenceline weaned several years before it got popular, and it can work well.
I think change is here to stay whether we like it or not, and most times I do not. :wink:
Soapweed said:the real jake said:I think I know where Soapweed was coming from in he earlier post about spending the time and money at home where you benefit from it, but I respectfully disagree with that as a blanket statement.
I was on the local NRCS board until recently, and we had an award and field tour every year, and they stll do BTW. I never had one stop that I didn't learn something useful, or a new idea I thought might be worth giving a try. I know we all can't always spare the time to take in all there is to offer, or we might never get our work done, and I bet we all know a producer just like that.
I also went to a seminar sponsored by Farm Credit Services years ago, that was done by a Tom Hogan. He specialized in low input ranching ideas, and had taken several ranches from the brink of failure and brought them back to prosperity. IMO a lot of ranchers don't think about options that they have available, and just do the same program year after year. Like for instance they might have a smaller cattle herd than their machinery lineup will cash flow, but they never consider any other possibilities of changing their operation. Tom Hogan said if you didn't run 1000 cows, you shouldn't own a tractor. That was a little further then I would agree with. Maybe way down south you could get away with that.
I read Kit Pharo's newsletter, and if nothing else he provokes thought. We fenceline weaned several years before it got popular, and it can work well.
I think change is here to stay whether we like it or not, and most times I do not. :wink:
You are right, "real jake", a person can always learn by keeping their eyes and ears open to new and good ideas. But this is another area in which a motto of "moderation in all things" can keep a person from plunging head first into the shallow end of the pool.
It's kind of like in the movie CROCODILE DUNDEE when it is mentioned that a person could pay for the services of a "shrink". Crocodile Dundee says, "Don't they have any mates?" That's the way I look at these high dollar seminars. They probably don't teach anything a person couldn't get for free by conversing with other people in the business of agriculture. There are just some things a person should never have to pay for, and this includes puppies and advice. :wink:
Northern Rancher said:Low input ranching doesn't mean that cattle are being mistreated in any way shape or form. What's worse a cow grazing out a bit longer-or a high input cow busting her butt calving out a big birthweight calf in winter. Frozen feet and ears don't do our business any great favours-high inputs don't necessarily equate to greater husbandry-cows calving in pens instead of on the grass kind of turn my stomach-scouring calves from overcrowding do the same-guess you should tour up in god's country-home of healthy cows and thrifty ranchers.
Big Muddy rancher said:I know what you mean about some of these guy's "THEORY'S". I went to, I think Dick Turners seminar one cold December day. He was just up from Arizona wearing white pants and penny loafers telling us how we should be wintering cattle in Snowy Sask.. I know all cows don't have to be fed bales every day of the winter as many use extended grazing seasons, swath grazing, corn grazing,balegrazing.ECT. but nutrictional needs do have to be met.
Big Muddy rancher said:I know all cows don't have to be fed bales every day of the winter as many use extended grazing seasons, swath grazing, corn grazing,balegrazing.ECT. but nutrictional needs do have to be met.