wrangler wrote: » Some new tanks have pipes pumping air through the slurry all the time leaving them ready to spread anytime, have you seen this
straight wrote: » My cows are back in off grass for the last week and protein has dropped below 3. The silage bales are overgrown and must be bad quality. Yields are holding up ok. On 5 kg of a good dairy nut. I had a similar issue in the autumn when milking off silage. Is there anything I can give the cows to help them milk off silage at the shoulders of the year. Would beet be good?
mahoney_j wrote: » Protein under 3 is lack of grass but more crucially lack of energy .are u feeding a high p nut ??thatll drive milk but will strip condition off cows
straight wrote: » 18% protein.
GrasstoMilk wrote: » Not really. Soil is slow to warm up and slow to cool down. You need air temps at a good 10 degrees to get soil over 6 after a cold spell
Neddyusa wrote: » Exactly, It needs to be above 6 on average for a week before growth really kicks off. You will get some growth and small response to fert N when it is reaching 6 degrees in the middle of the day - but only very very little growth. It has only just gone above 6 here the past three days since the freeze last week.
kevthegaff wrote: » Putting in sprayers in the next week, do they get entangled with cluster removers or are the one single one along the ground better?
whelan2 wrote: » Threw out the sprayer system. Use little hand sprayers from dealz. 2 for €1.50.
Timmaay wrote: » Been using a 5l garden sprayer here, they work perfect at the start but all are too cheap and flimsy, can only get 2months outa one. I'd happily pay 50/100e for a properly build one that would last and be reliable, anyone know where I'd get a good one?
kevthegaff wrote: » I just see with the drop down hoses they get in the way, do they break if one along the ground?
alps wrote: What be the lowest it went to, say during the cold spell? At 3 ft deep, does the heat come from above of below? Am I right in thinking a cave could hold 12c year round..
Keepgrowing wrote: » Dear "my buddy" I understand from "your buddy" that you are concerned about the welfare of cows on Irish dairy farms. I'm posting these pics to support your view. These pics are representative of the majority of dairy farms. I'll freely admit there are farms where conditions may be worse and some that will be better but on the whole these about get the average. These cows are stocked at 4/ha and as you say overstocking is a big problem. They've been through Ophellia, the beast from the east etc and their condition is showing it too. It's clearly an animal welfare time bomb on Irish dairy farms due to as you put it over stocking etc. Kindest regards KG PS. I forgot to draw your attention to the cows being caked in shyte as is typical across the industry
Gawddawggonnit wrote: » Lol. Interesting read on a Sunday morning. Indoor or outdoor doesn’t really matter a damn. Post photos of ye’r cows people. I’ve only seen one photo posted of cows not caked in shyte this winter, and that’s Keepgrowing. Doesn’t he have OCs? Any other photos of cows they may as well have them on slats....
Mooooo wrote: » Didn't come up
kevthegaff wrote: » I have a few high scc cows, was gona bring to the mart around 560 kgs, what will they make?