1 / 26

Winter Stockpiling Techniques

Winter Stockpiling Techniques. Winter Hay Being Fed. What Is Stockpile?. Forage Grown For Dormant Season Grazing . Biggest Money Saver In Grazing Operation. Maximize Growth. Stockpiling Mindset Begins In Spring. Start Off With Healthy Recovered Plants. Ammonium Nitrate .

vui
Télécharger la présentation

Winter Stockpiling Techniques

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Winter Stockpiling Techniques

  2. Winter Hay Being Fed

  3. What Is Stockpile? • Forage Grown For Dormant Season Grazing . • Biggest Money Saver In Grazing Operation.

  4. Maximize Growth • Stockpiling Mindset Begins In Spring. • Start Off With Healthy Recovered Plants.

  5. Ammonium Nitrate • Never Use Ammonium Nitrate On Pastures. • Kills Earthworms And Microbes. • Fertilizer Company Owns You.

  6. Our Previous Stockpile • 7-8 Grazing Rotations, August Heat Killed Fall Growth • No Time For Stockpile To Grow From Short Roots.

  7. Full Recovery=Huge Fall Growth • Plant Roots Have Stored Carbohydrates For Maximum Fall Growth. • Even With Limited Moisture, Good Growth.

  8. Extending The Growing Season • Massive Sward Insulates Soil Surface. • Massive Root Structure Insulates Soil Surface.

  9. Plants Continue To Grow • Missouri’s First Killing Frost October 10th. • We Now Grow Grass Till December. • Plants In Huge Greenhouse

  10. What Is 4-6 Weeks Growth? • Extra 4-6 Weeks Entire Farm Is Sending Up Green Leaves. • Extra 4-6 Weeks Of Not Feeding hay!

  11. Last In Fall, Last In Spring • Make Sure The Last Pasture Grazed In Fall Growing Season Is Last Pasture Grazed In Spring.

  12. We Graze Most Of Winter • Don’t Graze It Short. • Leave Some Winter Litter. • Average Hay Feeding, Last 4 Years = 8 Days (Ice Storm)

  13. Have 15 Day Hay Cushion • Just In Case. • Severe Ice Storms Are Tough. • Buy Your Hay.

  14. Stop Haying Your Farm • Cutting Hay Exposes Ground, Microbial Life Stops. • Haying Promotes Monocultures.

  15. Winter Mud • Keep Them Moving, No Backfences. • Pugging and Compaction Is A Function Of Time.

  16. No Hay Rings • Rings Are Detrimental To Sod And Animals. • Unroll It, Covers Nice Long Area, Full Access To Mob.

  17. Winter Grazing Note • When Winter Strip-grazing, Watch The Temperature. • Temperatures Drop, Must Allocate More Forage.

  18. Winter Water • We Fence Off Ponds • Keep Mob Off Pond Ice. • One 8 Foot Long Hole=300 Head.

  19. Grazing Through Snow • 20” Snow Is No Problem, As Long As There Is A Reward Of Thick Forage

  20. Wintering Costs • 80% Of Keeping Livestock Is Encountered In Wintering Them. • Stockpile Grazing Limits This Cost.

  21. Winter Herd Health • Cattle Love To Graze • Much Healthier Walking & Grazing Stockpile Than Standing & Eating Hay.

  22. Closing Thoughts • Entering Summer, All Plants Should Be Recovered. • Allocate Enough Forage With Temperature Change. • Leave Winter Litter • Have 15 Day Hay Reserve

More Related