farmerjan
Herd Master
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2016
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- Location
- Shenandoah Valley Virginia
They don't make any more land. If the property is a good buy then it would probably be a good deal.
You could work out a deal for someone to make the alfalfa hay so that you would have hay in your barn and some income from the rest? One thing, don't consider grazing it if you want it for hay because the animals can easily bloat on it when grazing. Alfalfa is a high protein feed, and we have grazed some mixed stands... but we also feed pre grazing anti bloat blocks for the cattle. It is tricky to do it... not impossible, but losing one animal would make it a very expensive lesson. And the alfalfa does not hold up well in grazing rotations unless it is the newer varieties that are supposed to be used for grazing. We just have found that making hay and being able to control the feeding is ALOT safer in the long run for our cattle and sheep.
We have 2 places that we run cattle on one section and make first cutting hay in the other 2 sections. Then that gets moved into the rotation for grazing. It works well if we get a decent amount of rain to get some regrowth.... it is a balancing act. But we do not have near enough head to put there to keep it down in the fast growth in the spring, and then sustain that number through the rest of the summer. So your possible plans to do what you are thinking on the ground you have now makes perfect sense.
Just because Dexters are a smaller breed, don't discount the amount of feed/hay/grass they eat. In reality highlands are also considered a small breed. And they are very very hardy. They can seem to live on very little because of the way the breed has been developed. Because Dexters are considered more of a dual purpose breed, they actually will require a little more feed for their size since their bodies are designed to make more milk than a straight bred beef animal. Just something to think about.
It is nice of you to want to keep your "eye open" for a possible place for the neighbor horse guy... but it is not your problem and it sounds like he is not a good steward of his land. You don't want to help him find a nice place, with people who are taking good care of their land like you do with yours, and then have him overgraze it and destroy the existing grass. I get that he is a friend... but you have different goals and you OBVIOUSLY are much more in tune with the land and your animals. That is something that is to be proud of. We try very hard to leave places we rent in as good or better shape each year and it has paid off in finding other places when we lose one. Mostly when we lose one, it is because the place has been sold.... and a couple that we had "taken out from under us" by someone offering more money.... and have had 2 come back to us in a few years because the other person just used the land up and didn't fertilize or otherwise take care of it. We turned one down, took back the other and then got screwed over again 3 years later... and will NEVER go back in there. Now, when we are going to lease a place, the first year is 1 yr and if both are happy after, then a minimum of 5 years. And everything is written out so that both parties KNOW what the other is responsible for. It makes for a fair deal for both.
I think you have a good outlook on what you are doing... and by taking the field out of horse use this year makes it much easier to just keep it out after that.
You could work out a deal for someone to make the alfalfa hay so that you would have hay in your barn and some income from the rest? One thing, don't consider grazing it if you want it for hay because the animals can easily bloat on it when grazing. Alfalfa is a high protein feed, and we have grazed some mixed stands... but we also feed pre grazing anti bloat blocks for the cattle. It is tricky to do it... not impossible, but losing one animal would make it a very expensive lesson. And the alfalfa does not hold up well in grazing rotations unless it is the newer varieties that are supposed to be used for grazing. We just have found that making hay and being able to control the feeding is ALOT safer in the long run for our cattle and sheep.
We have 2 places that we run cattle on one section and make first cutting hay in the other 2 sections. Then that gets moved into the rotation for grazing. It works well if we get a decent amount of rain to get some regrowth.... it is a balancing act. But we do not have near enough head to put there to keep it down in the fast growth in the spring, and then sustain that number through the rest of the summer. So your possible plans to do what you are thinking on the ground you have now makes perfect sense.
Just because Dexters are a smaller breed, don't discount the amount of feed/hay/grass they eat. In reality highlands are also considered a small breed. And they are very very hardy. They can seem to live on very little because of the way the breed has been developed. Because Dexters are considered more of a dual purpose breed, they actually will require a little more feed for their size since their bodies are designed to make more milk than a straight bred beef animal. Just something to think about.
It is nice of you to want to keep your "eye open" for a possible place for the neighbor horse guy... but it is not your problem and it sounds like he is not a good steward of his land. You don't want to help him find a nice place, with people who are taking good care of their land like you do with yours, and then have him overgraze it and destroy the existing grass. I get that he is a friend... but you have different goals and you OBVIOUSLY are much more in tune with the land and your animals. That is something that is to be proud of. We try very hard to leave places we rent in as good or better shape each year and it has paid off in finding other places when we lose one. Mostly when we lose one, it is because the place has been sold.... and a couple that we had "taken out from under us" by someone offering more money.... and have had 2 come back to us in a few years because the other person just used the land up and didn't fertilize or otherwise take care of it. We turned one down, took back the other and then got screwed over again 3 years later... and will NEVER go back in there. Now, when we are going to lease a place, the first year is 1 yr and if both are happy after, then a minimum of 5 years. And everything is written out so that both parties KNOW what the other is responsible for. It makes for a fair deal for both.
I think you have a good outlook on what you are doing... and by taking the field out of horse use this year makes it much easier to just keep it out after that.