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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Buying first load of hay tomorrow for the year
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<blockquote data-quote="Stocker Steve" data-source="post: 1749055" data-attributes="member: 1715"><p>Grass hay prices have gone higher here than they were this winter. A very late spring and low hay inventory and many droughty pastures were overgrazed last year... </p><p></p><p>A lot of our midsized TMR herds truck in some of their winter feed. Beet byproduct is still available, but $5.40 diesel is causing pain. I don't think this model will work well this year for those who are not close to a sugar plant.</p><p></p><p>Bred prices have not jumped up like many expected. I think folks are holding, until they know what their 2022-2023 hay inventory is. My base plan is to reduce the herd 15 to 20% more this fall. Prevent plant is a wild card.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Stocker Steve, post: 1749055, member: 1715"] Grass hay prices have gone higher here than they were this winter. A very late spring and low hay inventory and many droughty pastures were overgrazed last year... A lot of our midsized TMR herds truck in some of their winter feed. Beet byproduct is still available, but $5.40 diesel is causing pain. I don't think this model will work well this year for those who are not close to a sugar plant. Bred prices have not jumped up like many expected. I think folks are holding, until they know what their 2022-2023 hay inventory is. My base plan is to reduce the herd 15 to 20% more this fall. Prevent plant is a wild card. [/QUOTE]
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Buying first load of hay tomorrow for the year
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