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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
tips for ongoing drought
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<blockquote data-quote="Texan" data-source="post: 231272" data-attributes="member: 416"><p>Believe it or not HAY MAKER, but I agree with you for a change. :lol: Selling down is always the number one choice for me. After that, sell down some more. But there will come a time when a cattleman has sold all he thinks he can stand and has to try to save some cows to start back with. And if it takes grazing hay meadows to get those cows through until rain, or even to recoup some fertilizer money, it's a no-brainer. </p><p></p><p>In the kind of dry weather we're having, meadows will burn up whether you cut them or not. May as well get something out of them. You might have a few more weeds next year by not cutting this year. Generally speaking though, in time your meadows will forgive you for grazing them---as long as you take some and leave some.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Texan, post: 231272, member: 416"] Believe it or not HAY MAKER, but I agree with you for a change. :lol: Selling down is always the number one choice for me. After that, sell down some more. But there will come a time when a cattleman has sold all he thinks he can stand and has to try to save some cows to start back with. And if it takes grazing hay meadows to get those cows through until rain, or even to recoup some fertilizer money, it's a no-brainer. In the kind of dry weather we're having, meadows will burn up whether you cut them or not. May as well get something out of them. You might have a few more weeds next year by not cutting this year. Generally speaking though, in time your meadows will forgive you for grazing them---as long as you take some and leave some. [/QUOTE]
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tips for ongoing drought
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