OneFineAcre
Herd Master
I've been reading your entire thread for the last couple of days, but I decided to quote your OP.bubba1358 said:Here's my situation:
I have 3 Katahdins (one ram, 2 ewes) that I plan to keep as breeding stock and use the lambs as meat.
I have a full-size donkey.
I am 75/25 toward getting a Jersey milk cow.
On my property, I have 5.4 acres total - about 2.5 can be used for pasture (after the buildings, gardens, etc.), with another half as a dedicated hay field. The rest is gardens, buildings, etc.
Of that 2.5, maybe .75 of it semi-wooded. The grass is still lush, but there are some trees - cedar, ash, hickory, etc.
I live along I-24 between Nashville and Chattanooga, to give you an idea of the climate and region. The USDA zone 7 and 6B line runs pretty close to me.
I have a small flock of chickens, with enough coop space to potentially get up to ~40 dual-purpose birds.
I am also looking at starting on meat rabbits soon-ish.
Goats are NOT an option, for various reasons which I will not get into right now.
My goal is to feed everybody without ever having to buy grain, feed, or hay from outside the land.
I fully realize that the donkey is likely the odd man out here once the cow comes along, as 2.5 acres cannot support all of that, and he will likely go. BUT, I have also been receiving conflicting reports about whether 2.5 acres can support a single milking cow plus 3 breeding sheep. I hear some say no way, and others say absolutely it'll work. I can't find anything definitive.
So my question is, is this stocking rate too high? Can I do three sheep and a cow on 2.5 acres? Is .5 acres enough to generate over-winter hay for those guys? If so, how? If not, what would y'all recommend? Smaller cow? Eat the sheep? Milk a llama instead? (not really, but I'm open to creative, non-goat suggestions). Thanks in advance.
I think the answer is "no" you cannot feed these animals off of this space. You cannot produce enough hay off of 1/2 acre to feed during the winter. I doubt very seriously you can feed them adequately when your pasture is lush.
You said goats are not an option, so I will not even question that fact. Doubt you could feed all of them without buying hay and feed even if you went the route of a couple of standard dairy goats anyway. Besides, you never even mentioned grain or alfalfa hay. Dairy cow will need that. Or, are you growing alfalfa on the 1/2 acre?
Like someone else said, go ahead and try any way. Worse thing that will happen is you will have to buy hay and feed or sell animals.