whelan2 wrote: » Anyone calving yet? Any cows out? Will be starting calving here next week. Grass is mainly under water here at the moment
degetme wrote: » Agritech dry cow elite was always expensive. I bought all winter requirements early December on the back of advice here on a factory fire.
kevthegaff wrote: » First in 10 yrs havent
orm0nd wrote: » wonder that people are giving for pre calver mins. got a few bags y/day and think I've been jocked
RedPeppers wrote: » Had first calf here on 8th cow went about 12 days early fairly small fr bull. As for cows out come back to me around 3rd week of March on that place here is swimming
yewtree wrote: » Ground is floating here at the moment, still plan to be grazing bt mid feburary. Its amazing how ground dries as days get longer and hopfully weather dried up, cant rain forever!
Timmaay wrote: » Big amount of standing water in the wetter paddocks, but drier ones doing well, got 10 maiden heifers hogging the calf house for last 2wks and need to turf them back out to get it ready for calving.
alps wrote: » Are Agritec minerals fed at a 50g rate as opposed to the normal 100g rate of most pre calved minerals.....double the strength so to speak....would account for the apparent expense..
alps wrote: » Gave up on the weanlings here on Wednesday and boxed them home...thought we could make it through to the other end. Bunch of 19 of the lightest that we left out when the rest came home 1st of December..you could not pick them out of the group now....
Keepgrowing wrote: » Haven't fed pre calving minerals here in the past 4 years. No difference in calving difficulty or retained after birth
degetme wrote: » What made you think there of no benefit
Buford T. Justice V wrote: » Don't feed any dry cow minerals anymore, all minerals through the water now and blood tested 4x/year. Calving last spring was the easiest it's been for years and only had to jack a few heifers and 2 cows. Only 1 case of cleanings held last year as well and that was a cow that slipped a calf. Happy out now, it's not cheap but overall have a much easier time calving and bulling that before so that has to count as well.
einn32 wrote: » Sounds like a nice system. How do the blood tests work?
Say my name wrote: » You're spoiled rotten with that land. I know if I stopped with the minerals here I'd have retained cleanings, lazy calves and harder to go back incalf. It's for those reasons I started with minerals in the first place.
Keepgrowing wrote: » I'm well aware of the land I have and feed it as required. Started mineral and trace element analysis in last 3 years. I've spread some zinc in certain areas. In very early stages of building a picture of what's required at a micro level. I've enlisted the services of a highly regarded agronomist to assist in this. When we grew tillage with beet in the rotation we paid very close attention to trace elements especially in the sugar beet. I don't think we can grow much more grass but perhaps we could grow as much with less artificial N. I'm certain that the amount of N lost to ground water here is minimal as we are in the catchment for a water scheme bore hole that's monitored monthly. The N levels are very stable and on the low side of safe limits. I'm copied in on these test results as I feel this back ground info may become valuable in the future.
Say my name wrote: » There's no denying you're on top of your game.
Keepgrowing wrote: » By Jaysus, I often wonder
Waffletraktor wrote: » Was going playing with trace elements part of the want for a decent sprayer? Have ye played around with soil mapping yet?
alps wrote: » Sunday Independent running an article on the 250 wealthiest people in Ireland..... We're all going to be named now.....