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Cattle Boards
Grasses, Pastures & Hay
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<blockquote data-quote="GoWyo" data-source="post: 1842423" data-attributes="member: 38220"><p>Some places, especially mountain valley areas, get snowed up and do feed from November to May. Others winter on the desert and seldom feed anything and calve in May-June. </p><p></p><p>I try to graze 10 months and feed 1 ton of hay per head. Many years I can get by at .75 tons and others take 1.5 tons per head. We raise maybe 8-10 tons of irrigated hay on our small meadow and last year and raised about 24 tons on a dryland improved seeding. The rest we purchased. If we can keep hay costs down, that is key.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GoWyo, post: 1842423, member: 38220"] Some places, especially mountain valley areas, get snowed up and do feed from November to May. Others winter on the desert and seldom feed anything and calve in May-June. I try to graze 10 months and feed 1 ton of hay per head. Many years I can get by at .75 tons and others take 1.5 tons per head. We raise maybe 8-10 tons of irrigated hay on our small meadow and last year and raised about 24 tons on a dryland improved seeding. The rest we purchased. If we can keep hay costs down, that is key. [/QUOTE]
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