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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
lawn grass clippings?? anyway to keep it??
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<blockquote data-quote="GhengisKhan" data-source="post: 369870" data-attributes="member: 6284"><p>Hi there, I found this forum via a google search for just this topic. We have corrals and a barn, but no land. We are poor, but hard workers. We have bottle calves we've taken on, and will have to sell them before next winter, or find a cheap way to feed them.</p><p></p><p>One thing worth mentioning is that there are untold tons of lawn clippings sent to landfills daily in summer. What a waste. Any useful purpose would be an improvement. </p><p></p><p>The pesticide/herbicide issue is valid of course, but generally, the person cutting the grass is the person who applies chemicals. They should be able to wait a certain period of time; only collecting chemical free clippings. </p><p></p><p>Regarding weeds, same holds true here. The guy with the mower should be able to choose grass from weed-free lawns.</p><p></p><p>So if we assume that the first two problems are solved....</p><p></p><p>Properly drying the stuff might be possible. I'm thinking, a giant tumbler with a fan? Or a box with air pumped in from the bottom?</p><p></p><p>If the drying could be done, are there still health risks? What percentage of their diet could safely consist of urban lawn clippings?</p><p></p><p>What about the nutritional value? If we could properly dry it, and save it for winter, does someone know what kind of suplementation we would need?</p><p></p><p>In addition to bottle calves, we have a few goats, and I wonder if I could winter <em>them</em> with the grass clippings? Does someone know if there is any kind of animal that would thrive on grass clippings? I like the idea of making profit and use from others wastefulness.</p><p></p><p>Thank you</p><p>Ghengis</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GhengisKhan, post: 369870, member: 6284"] Hi there, I found this forum via a google search for just this topic. We have corrals and a barn, but no land. We are poor, but hard workers. We have bottle calves we've taken on, and will have to sell them before next winter, or find a cheap way to feed them. One thing worth mentioning is that there are untold tons of lawn clippings sent to landfills daily in summer. What a waste. Any useful purpose would be an improvement. The pesticide/herbicide issue is valid of course, but generally, the person cutting the grass is the person who applies chemicals. They should be able to wait a certain period of time; only collecting chemical free clippings. Regarding weeds, same holds true here. The guy with the mower should be able to choose grass from weed-free lawns. So if we assume that the first two problems are solved.... Properly drying the stuff might be possible. I'm thinking, a giant tumbler with a fan? Or a box with air pumped in from the bottom? If the drying could be done, are there still health risks? What percentage of their diet could safely consist of urban lawn clippings? What about the nutritional value? If we could properly dry it, and save it for winter, does someone know what kind of suplementation we would need? In addition to bottle calves, we have a few goats, and I wonder if I could winter [i]them[/i] with the grass clippings? Does someone know if there is any kind of animal that would thrive on grass clippings? I like the idea of making profit and use from others wastefulness. Thank you Ghengis [/QUOTE]
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