Planing For Year Long Grazing On Cover Crops At Young Red Angus.

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Komentáře • 15

  • @portisfeedandseed480
    @portisfeedandseed480 Před rokem +5

    Really good video. This is what it's all about. It is all logistics and planning; utilizing the different crops that grow at different times. Jay is using the 3 basic forage crops as the base for both monoculture and mixes. Winter cereals like Rye, Triticale, Barley, Wheat, provide in fall and early spring. Oats are a cool season grass to utilize for both late spring and fall, and warm season sorghum-sudan, corn, millets for the summer, and they also stockpile well for winter. Add what you want to these base crops for a mix. This is what makes farming fun and rewarding. I strongly feel that it is through efforts like this that we will start to solve problems and find solutions. Great job, Jay. Enjoyed the video. It's more educational than you may think.

  • @andrewcasper2856
    @andrewcasper2856 Před rokem +3

    Best wishes going into spring! I really appreciated the walk through of your grazing plan integrated with your cash crops. Nice to see the big picture. I look forward to seeing how the year goes for you!

  • @jonstevensmaplegrovefarms3754

    I like the idea to graze as many days as possible. For growing forages we basically have from May too early September. I would like to figure out a taller mix so if we do start getting some snow the cows would still be able to walk through there and eat. 60 inches of snow on average can be a challenge

  • @dougayers7517
    @dougayers7517 Před rokem +1

    Nice seeing some fields.
    The cut over to field G was especially enjoyable at 11:00 minutes in. Wish the drive would have lasted a little longer.
    Would have been interesting to look at the aggregation in each field while you were there. What weeds are there.
    Cows look nice. Wide open spaces are nice.

  • @doubleograzingcompany2780

    If you aren’t trying to graze your winter stock pile through the active frost, I wouldn’t worry about prusic acid. After it dries down it should be just as safe as your Milo stocks.

    • @youngredangus6041
      @youngredangus6041  Před rokem

      Thanks
      That’s what I’m worried about
      I’ll have to have one mix that has no sorghum in it every year

    • @portisfeedandseed480
      @portisfeedandseed480 Před rokem +1

      I would echo that statement. Prussic acid turns into a gas and dissipates in 5-7 days after killing frost.

  • @willdeutmeyer5425
    @willdeutmeyer5425 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Could you show more on the jimmy red corn?

  • @stevefischer585
    @stevefischer585 Před 8 měsíci +1

    what kind of oats are they do you put nitrogen on oats very tall thanks

  • @sarbsukhsingh8347
    @sarbsukhsingh8347 Před rokem

    Hello, im from north india. I would like to know how many (at max) buffaloes i will be able to graze on 3 acres of land through this regen grazing practice?

    • @nandisaand5287
      @nandisaand5287 Před 6 měsíci +1

      This guy isn't doing any sort of regenerative practices, and his fields show it. Every field he was on was burned out and lifeless, the soils bare. He spoke of chemically terminating crops and leaving cows on fields for weeks at a time.

    • @pault.juckniess7265
      @pault.juckniess7265 Před 6 měsíci

      @@nandisaand5287 not a farmer , but an interested observer. The bare soils were sad. There are folks on the internet that are relay cropping multiple crops in with cover crops so the soil is never bare. They also add cattle to the mix. In those systems it seems that "pushing" the soil made it better. This g