ArtisticFarmer
Chillin' with the herd
Is it absolutely necessary to have several pastures to rotate the goats on? What are the pros/cons? TIA
When you take these goats for their " walk" ... you might just want to wear your track shoes. You will need them !ArtisticFarmer said:At first at least, I won't be able to. I have approx. 5200 feet of pasture, and plan on getting 2 ND. I am thinking/planning to take them out for "walks" in the woods so they can play and eat things there
What are those 8" flowers anyway. Me neighbor has a 5 acre pasture that fits your description to a T and it was covered with those things. He moved 3 months ago and the weeds have outgrown everything and it's a jungle.bubba1358 said:Rotating pasture pros:
I see several fields around here where there a a few horses, sometimes cows or goats, on a small field year round. There's a big bale of hay in the middle constantly. The horses are always walking through these weird 8" yellow flowers that nothing will eat. The grass is less than a half inch long, and they smush their faces right up to the ground to get the newest tiny little growth. The field looks sick and the animals look sick. There are others that rotate, and in the two years I've been in this area, the pastures continue to look healthier.
Rotate if it is at all possible. If you can't, then be very mindful and don't overstock.
*makes mental note*Bossroo said:When you take these goats for their " walk" ... you might just want to wear your track shoes. You will need them !ArtisticFarmer said:At first at least, I won't be able to. I have approx. 5200 feet of pasture, and plan on getting 2 ND. I am thinking/planning to take them out for "walks" in the woods so they can play and eat things there
I have no idea. I took a picture of a field I pass by on my commute:Mike CHS said:What are those 8" flowers anyway. Me neighbor has a 5 acre pasture that fits your description to a T and it was covered with those things. He moved 3 months ago and the weeds have outgrown everything and it's a jungle.
Around here in Tennessee they stay just between ankle-deep and knee-high.Bossroo said:If those yellow 8" flowers grow to about 3'... they are mustard (as known here in the west).