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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Grazing at Green-up
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<blockquote data-quote="1982vett" data-source="post: 1618607" data-attributes="member: 7795"><p>Let me add to this....mine have free choice at the moment because the winter grasses they are on will be toast by the end of May. Rotational grazing management will not change that. Sure I could make them eat hay and let the ryegrass and clover grow. Then I could have hay to bale and I could feed it to them next year while they watched the grass grow while eating the hay I baled the year before.....</p><p></p><p>The key is stocking rates. </p><p></p><p> We've finally gotten a little rain and some warmer days. It's getting greener every day. It's the middle of February and probably by March some of the pasture gates will be closed. Juggling between pastures will begin but it isn't intensive management either. Their is a balance between working the land and the land working you.....</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="1982vett, post: 1618607, member: 7795"] Let me add to this....mine have free choice at the moment because the winter grasses they are on will be toast by the end of May. Rotational grazing management will not change that. Sure I could make them eat hay and let the ryegrass and clover grow. Then I could have hay to bale and I could feed it to them next year while they watched the grass grow while eating the hay I baled the year before..... The key is stocking rates. We’ve finally gotten a little rain and some warmer days. It’s getting greener every day. It’s the middle of February and probably by March some of the pasture gates will be closed. Juggling between pastures will begin but it isn’t intensive management either. Their is a balance between working the land and the land working you..... [/QUOTE]
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