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Calves on tubs
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<blockquote data-quote="Brute 23" data-source="post: 1472225" data-attributes="member: 6291"><p>Same here. Mine are a 30%, All-In-One, #225 for like $90.</p><p></p><p>Our grass goes back and forth. If you don't get rain during the hot months you end up with a bunch of stock piled, burnt up grass. The tubs keep the cattle hustling up for that grass. We run in to the same thing during the winter. We didn't have much rain after the hurricane this year so there was plenty of grass, but it was burnt up and probably had little nutritional value.</p><p></p><p>I'm debating getting away from fertilizing my hay fields. Its so expensive and such a huge risk. The last two years I have added the hay fields to the grazing rotation. I have cut hay and grazed them. The lower protein may bite me in the butt but not having the risk associated with the fertilizer is nice.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brute 23, post: 1472225, member: 6291"] Same here. Mine are a 30%, All-In-One, #225 for like $90. Our grass goes back and forth. If you don't get rain during the hot months you end up with a bunch of stock piled, burnt up grass. The tubs keep the cattle hustling up for that grass. We run in to the same thing during the winter. We didn't have much rain after the hurricane this year so there was plenty of grass, but it was burnt up and probably had little nutritional value. I'm debating getting away from fertilizing my hay fields. Its so expensive and such a huge risk. The last two years I have added the hay fields to the grazing rotation. I have cut hay and grazed them. The lower protein may bite me in the butt but not having the risk associated with the fertilizer is nice. [/QUOTE]
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