Young95 wrote: » When are they due ?
DJ98 wrote: » Anyone with ewes housed yet or planning on doing so, plan on putting the first of them in just after Christmas
wrangler wrote: » I was at a farm walk at robin Talbots, he had it washed and chopped and put in a clamp and sealed with polythene, looked lovely stuff. only thing was he had to take a slice off the whole face every day to keep it fresh. He used to slice it off with the bucket. This was in May when we saw it
charolais0153 wrote: » If its clean,it should last for a long time . its only when its dirty and starts heating that you run into problems
Siamsa Sessions wrote: » I know there was a discussion on here about beet recently and how long it lasts after it’s pulled, someone said 6 weeks and someone else said 3 months. Was there any agreement in the end?
charolais0153 wrote: » Over winter.??. Hed do well to do that during summer
Young95 wrote: » Thanks for the feedback. It was 3 years ago when I seen it but I think I remember he told me he got 180 ewes 4 months grazing on 8 acres by doing it no waste grazed down to the clay nearly and ewes where in suburb condition all twin bearing never saw meal or hay/silage or the inside of a shed just all grass/.
wrangler wrote: » Great way of wintering sheep, I did it here for a few years with electrified sheep wire and a solar fencer, close it in sept, graze from december. But it decimated the perennial ryegrass in the sward, huge difference in the sward that wasn't wintered on and land that was. My land is very heavy clay, and I always thought that sheep farming promoted ryegrass, which it does, until I started this. If you were practising rotational reseeding, you could do it on a division for the last 2 or 3 years before reseeding/ I was at a sheep conference in the North and one of the presentations was about it, I went up to the speaker after and told her my experience and she was unconvinced. OH was at Confernce in England three years after and same speaker spoke about block grazing and she actually talked about the farmer that she met in NI and how they had the same experience since, especially on heavy soils. But it's a lovely way to winter sheep
Young95 wrote: » Anyone here graze der ewes at this time of year by giving them a daily allowance of grass or day grazing then move on? Seen one man do it and the results were good.
DJ98 wrote: » Whats the ideal size of lambing pens 5ftx5 or 4ftx4, medium sized belclare ewes and large suffolks
DJ98 wrote: » Has anyone here got lambing cameras set up, how do you find them are they clear enough?
Green farmer wrote: » Wrangler, even find it hard to get the Lleyns above 40kg ? Have some here that are more or less Adlib and looking super healthy , but just aren’t getting much above 40kg on the scales ?
wrangler wrote: » Actually had one and a half bags in my head which is, of course, 36kgs. we had no grass, They had the ditches eaten out of it
Willfarman wrote: » @ 30 cent a kg that’s 21€.
DJ98 wrote: » Wooden hurdles vs galvanise hurdles. Wooden ones seem much cheaper but then wouldn't last as long