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Grasses, Pastures & Hay
Will people come to Arkansas to buy hay at $80 a bale?
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<blockquote data-quote="backhoeboogie" data-source="post: 312209" data-attributes="member: 3162"><p>Everything I grow is "horse quality" coastal. I have $35 a bale in it just in irrigation. </p><p></p><p>"05 was so bad here locally that cactus actually dried up and died. When the brush fires broke out, cedar trees actually flashed just like a can of gasoline would. I went down to 10 head. Luckily the '05 drought was local and prices were really good. This year has been bad but not nearly as bad as '05. </p><p></p><p>This year I made an awful lot of hay. With only 10 head at the start of fall, I sold a lot of hay and pocketed a lot of nickels. </p><p></p><p>The imported hay is not worth the money. Hore people are offering me $120 a bale for my hay versus the stuff coming in from the east for $80. My winter grasses have had some rain this year, unlike last fall, and I have forage. As such, I will have a bit of surplus hay and I have turned some more lose to close friends at $80, even tho the horse folks are offering more. </p><p></p><p>I have 130 acres of pure coastal on the Brazos flood plain that I will not graze next year. It will be in hay production only. I have standing orders for hay. </p><p></p><p>There are many folks who sold out completely in '05. '06 was bad but not nearly as bad as '05. In '05 we got a bit of rain in early May, about 2 inches in early September, and then nothing until late January. Each time a cow took a step dust blew. We were haying cows in late June. If you didn't have irrigation, you didn't have anything to feed for nearly a whole year. </p><p></p><p>People were on this board, (and others) talking about how farmers burned off catus needles and fed cows cactus in the 50's. I laughed each and every time I read that. Prickly pear ears looked like pieces of carboard. The old timers said it was the worst they had ever seen and they survived the 50's. All records that have ever been kept for this area were broken. Fort Worth and areas east of here got rain we didn't get and they were still crying. It rained up to 12 inches north of here and the Brazos was flooded. </p><p></p><p>If people had not sold out in '05 completely or cut down like I did, cattle prices would have even been worse for '06. The drought in '06 was only moderate but it was widespread.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="backhoeboogie, post: 312209, member: 3162"] Everything I grow is "horse quality" coastal. I have $35 a bale in it just in irrigation. "05 was so bad here locally that cactus actually dried up and died. When the brush fires broke out, cedar trees actually flashed just like a can of gasoline would. I went down to 10 head. Luckily the '05 drought was local and prices were really good. This year has been bad but not nearly as bad as '05. This year I made an awful lot of hay. With only 10 head at the start of fall, I sold a lot of hay and pocketed a lot of nickels. The imported hay is not worth the money. Hore people are offering me $120 a bale for my hay versus the stuff coming in from the east for $80. My winter grasses have had some rain this year, unlike last fall, and I have forage. As such, I will have a bit of surplus hay and I have turned some more lose to close friends at $80, even tho the horse folks are offering more. I have 130 acres of pure coastal on the Brazos flood plain that I will not graze next year. It will be in hay production only. I have standing orders for hay. There are many folks who sold out completely in '05. '06 was bad but not nearly as bad as '05. In '05 we got a bit of rain in early May, about 2 inches in early September, and then nothing until late January. Each time a cow took a step dust blew. We were haying cows in late June. If you didn't have irrigation, you didn't have anything to feed for nearly a whole year. People were on this board, (and others) talking about how farmers burned off catus needles and fed cows cactus in the 50's. I laughed each and every time I read that. Prickly pear ears looked like pieces of carboard. The old timers said it was the worst they had ever seen and they survived the 50's. All records that have ever been kept for this area were broken. Fort Worth and areas east of here got rain we didn't get and they were still crying. It rained up to 12 inches north of here and the Brazos was flooded. If people had not sold out in '05 completely or cut down like I did, cattle prices would have even been worse for '06. The drought in '06 was only moderate but it was widespread. [/QUOTE]
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