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Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Kicking the hay habit
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<blockquote data-quote="Muletrack" data-source="post: 1718714" data-attributes="member: 30827"><p>I've not read Jim Gerrish's book. Am afraid to buy it because so much other material I've seen has little info for the far north. I'm in East Central North Dakota Corn/Soybean country. Although we are in the top 10 states for numbers of cows, the focus is mainly grain. There's little info available (practically nothing from NDSU) on regenerative grazing, or converting cropland to cattle (which is my ultimate goal). People always point me to Gabe Brown, but he is constantly planting, planting, planting ... yes, that works for him, but I figure, if I have to run a tractor, I might as well be baling. We have nothing that stockpiles well in North Dakota -- so bale grazing seems my best bet. Thoughts? Is Gerrish's book worth adding to my library?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Muletrack, post: 1718714, member: 30827"] I've not read Jim Gerrish's book. Am afraid to buy it because so much other material I've seen has little info for the far north. I'm in East Central North Dakota Corn/Soybean country. Although we are in the top 10 states for numbers of cows, the focus is mainly grain. There's little info available (practically nothing from NDSU) on regenerative grazing, or converting cropland to cattle (which is my ultimate goal). People always point me to Gabe Brown, but he is constantly planting, planting, planting ... yes, that works for him, but I figure, if I have to run a tractor, I might as well be baling. We have nothing that stockpiles well in North Dakota -- so bale grazing seems my best bet. Thoughts? Is Gerrish's book worth adding to my library? [/QUOTE]
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