DAPNET Forums Archive › Forums › The Front Porch › Off Topic Discussion › Bad winters/drought taking it’s toll.
- This topic has 6 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 5 months ago by jac.
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- June 3, 2011 at 11:10 am #42780Nat(wasIxy)Participant
I think mobstocking has shielded us so far, but it’s beginning to take it’s toll now. I know UK conditions are milder than most of the rest of the world so you’ll laugh at two dry summers and -19C winters, but we’re adapted here for it to be very wet so this is a biggie for us!
We usually end up with a surplus of forage, so when we had the dry spell last year we managed to sell our reduced hay crop and still had a big pile to last us through winter. Trouble is that because it was a dry summer our grazing season was reduced and the extended housed period meant we ate up our entire surplus. (thank goodness it was there, as forage prices were/are high). We struggled badly for straw though, and ended up having to pay for some.
That would be fine, except now we have an even worse drought going on. The cattle are well fed so far, but once they get to the end of the field they are in, there’s no regrowth for them to move onto. We already grazed down to the nubbins on the first ‘flush’ of growth, and I think to do it again would spell doom for the pasture long term. We do have more grass, good grass, but according to 10year contract we have with the government we’re only supposed to cut it for hay after the 15th july. However, we had an emergency meeting this morning and agreed we’re just going to have to graze it and hope they don’t notice…
We have a crop of lucerne that’s doing well, and 15acres of other land to cut that we usually sell but won’t and that may see us through winter, but only if we cut down on mouths. We have picked out 5cows to sell that aren’t doing well/haven’t calved. They won’t make much, but at least we won’t have to feed them or pay to have them shot/taken away. All my bullocks will have to go in autumn, no matter what state they’re in – feeding them over winter would be senseless. Unfortunately one is so thin (he was bottom of the pecking order in winter) I think he has to go now, to the knackerman. If we had the grass I’d give him time to recover in the hope I can break even on him, but it’s not there and the better animals need his share.
So there we have it. I really hope all these measures work and we have a wet spring next year, or really we’re doomed!
Just wanted to vent…
June 4, 2011 at 3:13 am #67588sanhestarParticipantHello,
we have a similar situation right now in Germany but I looked at next weeks weather forecast and it projected rain for a whole week. So I still have hope.
June 4, 2011 at 8:40 am #67590jacParticipantPretty much the same scene here. The grass is under stress now and on top of that we have a cold wind which hasnt helped. The big dairies cut silage here to the calender regardless of how much bulk they have just so they can squeeze 3 cuts out of a season….
JohnJune 4, 2011 at 10:06 am #67589Nat(wasIxy)ParticipantYes plenty of silaging going on here too from the dairy boys.
I’ve managed to get some grazing for my bullocks – they’re going to our local church as they have a nice lot of grass there! We were going to send a bull and some cows but we were worried he’d topple gravestones!
My oxen are also going out on ‘the long acre’ (road verges) as there’s plenty there and the council will only mow it if we don’t make use of it and needs must…not sure what DEFRA think of that but we’ll worry about that later…
June 4, 2011 at 8:29 pm #67587dominiquer60ModeratorI hope for the best for all of you effected by drought, whether overseas or here in the states, we had a good taste of it last year and we don’t wish it on anyone.
ErikaJune 4, 2011 at 9:59 pm #67586Does’ LeapParticipantWe have the other extreme here in Vermont – 20 inches of rain in the last 2 months. We are relatively unaffected having well drained soils and a pasture based system, but I have several farmer friends whose vegetable fields are literally underwater. Large dairy farms have found large portions of their planted corn crop not emerging due to rotting seed and washout.
George
June 4, 2011 at 10:10 pm #67585goodcompanionParticipant@Ixy 27401 wrote:
Yes plenty of silaging going on here too from the dairy boys.
I’ve managed to get some grazing for my bullocks – they’re going to our local church as they have a nice lot of grass there! We were going to send a bull and some cows but we were worried he’d topple gravestones!
My oxen are also going out on ‘the long acre’ (road verges) as there’s plenty there and the council will only mow it if we don’t make use of it and needs must…not sure what DEFRA think of that but we’ll worry about that later…
I’ve always thought the use of verges in Britain being an excellent idea in practice. So many thousands of acres are mown in the US and left to bleach in the sun along our roads and interstates. Nobody benefits, and the taxpayer pays for it.
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