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Please share your alternative/old time ways
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<blockquote data-quote="Starting late" data-source="post: 574116" data-attributes="member: 8634"><p>I am in my second year of raising beef cattle. I am trying NOT to do everything commercially. A good example is the livestock barn I built. It was built by my 2 sons and I. We used some American Chestnut 2x4's and some Fir 2x10's salvage from an old dairy barn. We used locally sawn red oak 1x6's for the siding, which was put on vertically like on all the old barns. I used the same techniques for putting the siding on as they did 150 years ago. We used free power poles to put it up also. The barn looks great with it's solid oak siding and we built a 28x40 with a new colored steel roof for less than $2,500 total. I want to get into crop rotation and biodiverstiy in the hay fields and pastures. As an example we just tried an experiment by drilling rye into some fields where clover or Alfalfa have been present in order to utilize some of the Nitrogen converted by the legumes. The rye should be a valuable source of hay and winter forage. I also intend to try wheat, barley, oats, turnips, etc. I am specifically looking for ways to cut back on conventional fertilizers and make the soil more self sustaining. I am also curious about feeding "corn fodder" as many of the farmers my Grandpa's age fed alot of it. Can I plant corn in a small patch and harvest it by hand for "fodder". How is the nutrition of fodder? I hope some of you more experienced farmers will share your wisdom. I think that the art of farming for the long term has been replace by a quick buck commercialized version. Thanks for the help.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Starting late, post: 574116, member: 8634"] I am in my second year of raising beef cattle. I am trying NOT to do everything commercially. A good example is the livestock barn I built. It was built by my 2 sons and I. We used some American Chestnut 2x4's and some Fir 2x10's salvage from an old dairy barn. We used locally sawn red oak 1x6's for the siding, which was put on vertically like on all the old barns. I used the same techniques for putting the siding on as they did 150 years ago. We used free power poles to put it up also. The barn looks great with it's solid oak siding and we built a 28x40 with a new colored steel roof for less than $2,500 total. I want to get into crop rotation and biodiverstiy in the hay fields and pastures. As an example we just tried an experiment by drilling rye into some fields where clover or Alfalfa have been present in order to utilize some of the Nitrogen converted by the legumes. The rye should be a valuable source of hay and winter forage. I also intend to try wheat, barley, oats, turnips, etc. I am specifically looking for ways to cut back on conventional fertilizers and make the soil more self sustaining. I am also curious about feeding "corn fodder" as many of the farmers my Grandpa's age fed alot of it. Can I plant corn in a small patch and harvest it by hand for "fodder". How is the nutrition of fodder? I hope some of you more experienced farmers will share your wisdom. I think that the art of farming for the long term has been replace by a quick buck commercialized version. Thanks for the help. [/QUOTE]
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