Bullocks wrote: » Maybe I could get them tighter but they were burying their heads yesterday and I just said feck it !
charolais0153 wrote: » Haha, they sound exactly like ours.
Limestone Cowboy wrote: » I'd be stubborn enough, no way I'd let them beat me.
Mac Taylor wrote: » Having a ****ty time of it here atm, we calve 20 sucklers and so far have lost three. One born who could not pee or poo, one born dead (pbr bull calf) and one whose mother never opened and had an awfully job getting the calf out, vet called on all occasions, now I have three calves with a combination of cocidious and another type of scour, another pbr bull calf looks to be on the way out. Nothing seems to be working on them, their all 4-6 weeks old and outside within a few days of being born, combine that with the weather (we only got manure out yesterday) i’m seriously wondering what the feck am I doing this for😡:mad:. Anyway enough time venting I have fencing to do:D
roosterman71 wrote: »
patsy_mccabe wrote: » Floating farm;https://m.independent.ie/business/farming/dairy/holy-cow-worlds-first-floating-farm-revealed-36835993.html And I thought zero grazing was madness.
Urine produced by the cows will drain through the floor and into an air-tight storage facility. By keeping it contained there, ammonia emissions will be limited and it will be able to be distributed for use as fertiliser for city farms. Manure, on the other hand, will be collected and stored separately.
Bullocks wrote: » Have you a headscoop ? I went to dose a few cows yesterday and just ended up doing the few that really needed it because they were hoors to catch . It will have to be injection or pour on from now on
Mac Taylor wrote: » Having a ****ty time of it here atm, we calve 20 sucklers and so far have lost three. One born who could not pee or poo, one born dead (pbr bull calf) and one whose mother never opened and had an awfully job getting the calf out, vet called on all occasions, now I have three calves with a combination of cocidious and another type of scour, another pbr bull calf looks to be on the way out. Nothing seems to be working on them, their all 4-6 weeks old and outside within a few days of being born, combine that with the weather (we only got manure out yesterday) i’m seriously wondering what the feck am I doing this for😡:mad:. Anyway enough time venting I have fencing to do:D
Burning Tires wrote: » Silage in 2 weeks here. All ground that couldn't be grazed.
MeTheMan wrote: » Got soil sample results back. Index 1 for p and 2 for k. PH is 5.6. What fertilizer is best for p. Most have higher k then p anything out there with high quantity p or would 10.10.20 be the best to go for. I never got lime spread before. First soil sample I've ever done. Always got the response that lime makes ground wet. Thinking I'll go with 1.5ton/ac for a start. What is a rough cost I'd be looking at for that?
whelan2 wrote: » Fertiliser only going out on silage ground here today. Ground very soft in spots
Reggie. wrote: » Could be just the pic Whelan but I think there's a crack in your windscreen
Say my name wrote: » It's the extra magnesium in applied lime that frees up any locked in phosphorus in soil. It's kind of why the soil in my part of wexford is so low in phosphorus and why it's near impossible to build up because the soil is so high in magnesium. 1.5 t would be a bit low imo. 2 or 3 t would be more like it for a reading that low. Tbh though with that kind of test result I'd be more in favour of a plough and reseed job. I know some people don't like the plough but for a permanent pasture plough it gives a great kick of available free nutrients at the start when turning up. It gives the chance to level and make a proper field out of it then and it'll take any hard pan that's after forming and put some air back into the ground. Even better if you could subsoil both ways before ploughing if it's damp ground.
ganmo wrote: » But there’s calcium lime and magnesium lime so know which one you’re getting. And the recommended max applied in one year is 2t/ac(without plowing then it’s 4)