FarmScapeGirl
Chillin' with the herd
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- Jul 16, 2012
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But, then again, they seem to love just about everything, and that doesn't mean it's always good for them.
I have about 40 acres, 2/3 heavily forested, and the remaining 1/3 is marginal land, mostly covered in cattails. We do use them for various things, biofuel, starch filler through the winters, and so on. I had a pile of them up by the barn the other day, the daughter and I were going to weave baskets. Well, my doe decided to take a nibble, then gobbled a few up, stalks and leaves. No plumes (we left those down in the gorge)
They are safe for us to eat, so I'm not too terribly worried about it, but this has gotten me thinking.... I don't have a lot of grass pasture land, but I do have cattails as far as the eye can see. If they can eat them as part of a regular diet, this would be very beneficial for our farm. I wouldn't have to haul in so much extra hay, and my horses can have more of the grass cause, well, they are horses, and big old softies when it comes to what they can eat.
Does anyone have any thoughts, or experience? They do have nutritional value, it's just not the easiest thing to harvest for human consumption though.
I have about 40 acres, 2/3 heavily forested, and the remaining 1/3 is marginal land, mostly covered in cattails. We do use them for various things, biofuel, starch filler through the winters, and so on. I had a pile of them up by the barn the other day, the daughter and I were going to weave baskets. Well, my doe decided to take a nibble, then gobbled a few up, stalks and leaves. No plumes (we left those down in the gorge)
They are safe for us to eat, so I'm not too terribly worried about it, but this has gotten me thinking.... I don't have a lot of grass pasture land, but I do have cattails as far as the eye can see. If they can eat them as part of a regular diet, this would be very beneficial for our farm. I wouldn't have to haul in so much extra hay, and my horses can have more of the grass cause, well, they are horses, and big old softies when it comes to what they can eat.
Does anyone have any thoughts, or experience? They do have nutritional value, it's just not the easiest thing to harvest for human consumption though.