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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
Your Opportunity to Chime in on Greg Judy's Methods
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<blockquote data-quote="RDFF" data-source="post: 1797882" data-attributes="member: 39018"><p>You're in TX..., no "poor man's concrete" to work in your favor against the compaction. "Context" will play an important role... That being said, I'd be surprised if they really experienced alot... unless there were laneways or something that the herd used consistently. Of course, you get rain/mud maybe there through the winter that we don't get here (frozen), so that could be a part of it then too. Did they chop the corn residue? OR maybe, did they work those stalks in the fall after harvest and then let the cattle on them? I could see it happening some then...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RDFF, post: 1797882, member: 39018"] You're in TX..., no "poor man's concrete" to work in your favor against the compaction. "Context" will play an important role... That being said, I'd be surprised if they really experienced alot... unless there were laneways or something that the herd used consistently. Of course, you get rain/mud maybe there through the winter that we don't get here (frozen), so that could be a part of it then too. Did they chop the corn residue? OR maybe, did they work those stalks in the fall after harvest and then let the cattle on them? I could see it happening some then... [/QUOTE]
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Your Opportunity to Chime in on Greg Judy's Methods
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