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<blockquote data-quote="pdfangus" data-source="post: 839518" data-attributes="member: 6543"><p>absolutley......</p><p>but you can not go off chasing every fad or all the latest wisdom from the latest expert and continuously change the operational goals.</p><p>sometimes this is hard to resist. I have made mistakes in this regard myself in my wild and impetuous middle age. fortunately I had a pretty fixed set of environmental constraints to keep me grounded. In my old age I have found new tools to assist me in better managing that environment with less inputs.</p><p>the hardest thing for us to do was to find a correct stocking rate for the operation. In our area it is due to the extreme variety of weather patterns. If we stock for a good year then most years we are way over stocked. If we stock for a hard year then most years we are understocked. I have yet to be able to define a normal year. but I did determine a target number of cattle that was about mid way and manage the grass and other inputs around that stocking rate.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pdfangus, post: 839518, member: 6543"] absolutley...... but you can not go off chasing every fad or all the latest wisdom from the latest expert and continuously change the operational goals. sometimes this is hard to resist. I have made mistakes in this regard myself in my wild and impetuous middle age. fortunately I had a pretty fixed set of environmental constraints to keep me grounded. In my old age I have found new tools to assist me in better managing that environment with less inputs. the hardest thing for us to do was to find a correct stocking rate for the operation. In our area it is due to the extreme variety of weather patterns. If we stock for a good year then most years we are way over stocked. If we stock for a hard year then most years we are understocked. I have yet to be able to define a normal year. but I did determine a target number of cattle that was about mid way and manage the grass and other inputs around that stocking rate. [/QUOTE]
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