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Winter Pasture
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<blockquote data-quote="wstevenl" data-source="post: 581446" data-attributes="member: 8201"><p>We just planted our pasture late this spring (it was too wet to plant early). We drilled oats with orchard, ladino clover, and a grazing alfalfa. This fall we added MaxQ Fescue but it's not coming up yet. We rotate our SMALL herd to a new paddock everyday and have gotten between 50 and 60 days rest between grazings. When the cows first went through it they were mostly eating oats and the perennials were just 1 or 2 inches tall. By the second grazing the oats were seeded out and the alfalfa was tall enough to graze (the orchard wasn't doing alot because it had gotten so hot). Now that it's cooled off the alfalfa is tall and some is blooming, the clover is starting to spread well and the orchardgrass is catching up and getting as tall as some of the alfalfa. The cows get ONE day on the forage and eat it down pretty hard but even with it being so young, it's coming back very well in 50-60 days. We did have to mow some oats early on because it was maturing too quickly for us. What we mowed instead of grazing doesn't look near as full and healthy as what we grazed hard and left. The only paddock that really looks poor is where we had the cows for about 30 hours and it rained 5 inches. It's now about 1/3 orchard grass, 1/3 weeds, and 1/3 bare. We spread fescue and timothy in this area and others. </p><p></p><p>We're trying to get some more grasses starting this fall so that our legume ratio isn't quite so high, but being eased onto it, the cows have done really well. We're going to pick a section to leave for winter pasture but we'll continue to move them everyday, it makes alot of difference - no paths! and less damage to the plants (except for biting them off).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wstevenl, post: 581446, member: 8201"] We just planted our pasture late this spring (it was too wet to plant early). We drilled oats with orchard, ladino clover, and a grazing alfalfa. This fall we added MaxQ Fescue but it's not coming up yet. We rotate our SMALL herd to a new paddock everyday and have gotten between 50 and 60 days rest between grazings. When the cows first went through it they were mostly eating oats and the perennials were just 1 or 2 inches tall. By the second grazing the oats were seeded out and the alfalfa was tall enough to graze (the orchard wasn't doing alot because it had gotten so hot). Now that it's cooled off the alfalfa is tall and some is blooming, the clover is starting to spread well and the orchardgrass is catching up and getting as tall as some of the alfalfa. The cows get ONE day on the forage and eat it down pretty hard but even with it being so young, it's coming back very well in 50-60 days. We did have to mow some oats early on because it was maturing too quickly for us. What we mowed instead of grazing doesn't look near as full and healthy as what we grazed hard and left. The only paddock that really looks poor is where we had the cows for about 30 hours and it rained 5 inches. It's now about 1/3 orchard grass, 1/3 weeds, and 1/3 bare. We spread fescue and timothy in this area and others. We're trying to get some more grasses starting this fall so that our legume ratio isn't quite so high, but being eased onto it, the cows have done really well. We're going to pick a section to leave for winter pasture but we'll continue to move them everyday, it makes alot of difference - no paths! and less damage to the plants (except for biting them off). [/QUOTE]
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