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Over-Conditioned Cattle
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<blockquote data-quote="inyati13" data-source="post: 1241418" data-attributes="member: 17767"><p>How serious is over-conditioned cows? Many users associate me with over-conditioned cattle. Based on the grass I am seeing now, that is going to continue. My farm is surveyed at 79.459 acres. Approximately 20 acres is hay. Another 5 acres are used for infrastructure. That translates to 55 acres of excellent pasture. The forages on the pastures consists of fescue, orchard grass, ladino clover, and red clover. Fescue dominates. I have a total of 17 head of mature animals. Currently there are 8 calves on the ground with 3 more to arrive in the next few weeks. In the fall, my fall cows and new heifers will calve. Not counting the calves, that comes to 3.2 acres per cow.</p><p></p><p>Assume that I do not want to increase the size of my herd. Assume that I will manage my pasture as follows:</p><p>25 acre back pasture</p><p>20 acre north pasture</p><p>10 acre breeding pasture to hold cows and heifers for AI service</p><p></p><p>My land is steep. Rotational grazing on my slopes is not feasible. The angle of repose is the angle from horizontal that granular material will assume without slumping. Many of my hillsides approach the angle of repose and in fact, there is old slumping on the steeper hills.</p><p>I could crowd all the cattle into one of the pastures but that solves one problem and creates another. Too much traffic on steep hills leads to erosion. I have as much concern for that as I do for over-conditioned cows.</p><p></p><p>That is why I ask: How serious is over-conditioned cows?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="inyati13, post: 1241418, member: 17767"] How serious is over-conditioned cows? Many users associate me with over-conditioned cattle. Based on the grass I am seeing now, that is going to continue. My farm is surveyed at 79.459 acres. Approximately 20 acres is hay. Another 5 acres are used for infrastructure. That translates to 55 acres of excellent pasture. The forages on the pastures consists of fescue, orchard grass, ladino clover, and red clover. Fescue dominates. I have a total of 17 head of mature animals. Currently there are 8 calves on the ground with 3 more to arrive in the next few weeks. In the fall, my fall cows and new heifers will calve. Not counting the calves, that comes to 3.2 acres per cow. Assume that I do not want to increase the size of my herd. Assume that I will manage my pasture as follows: 25 acre back pasture 20 acre north pasture 10 acre breeding pasture to hold cows and heifers for AI service My land is steep. Rotational grazing on my slopes is not feasible. The angle of repose is the angle from horizontal that granular material will assume without slumping. Many of my hillsides approach the angle of repose and in fact, there is old slumping on the steeper hills. I could crowd all the cattle into one of the pastures but that solves one problem and creates another. Too much traffic on steep hills leads to erosion. I have as much concern for that as I do for over-conditioned cows. That is why I ask: How serious is over-conditioned cows? [/QUOTE]
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