Tex,
Thanks for the well thought out answer. I am sorry that my typing on the phone this morning was such a mess.
It is interesting to me that your fescue was a fall crop. By the fall, we are done here. It has been cut 2 to 4 times and then allowed to rest.
I also wonder about the desire to have a monoculture in a pasture. There is a reason that the plants evolved together and often it provides feed year round, but not at a level that can sustain the intense grazing we need or desire today. I look at the longhorns of the 1800's in Texas as an example. The right animal on the right range did very well, granted, they are not the fat beef we desire today.
I chuckle at these guys here. They won't invest in the cattle because they are not making any money off of them, but they are not making any money because they will not invest in them.
Parasites here are a huge issue that can be controlled with good grazing management. When you have a stocking rate of less than 1 acre per cow calf unit, you have to manage it or the parasites will take every bit of profit and gain out of your animals.
Anyway, a lot of this is just rambling.
Thanks for the well thought out answer. I am sorry that my typing on the phone this morning was such a mess.
It is interesting to me that your fescue was a fall crop. By the fall, we are done here. It has been cut 2 to 4 times and then allowed to rest.
I also wonder about the desire to have a monoculture in a pasture. There is a reason that the plants evolved together and often it provides feed year round, but not at a level that can sustain the intense grazing we need or desire today. I look at the longhorns of the 1800's in Texas as an example. The right animal on the right range did very well, granted, they are not the fat beef we desire today.
I chuckle at these guys here. They won't invest in the cattle because they are not making any money off of them, but they are not making any money because they will not invest in them.
Parasites here are a huge issue that can be controlled with good grazing management. When you have a stocking rate of less than 1 acre per cow calf unit, you have to manage it or the parasites will take every bit of profit and gain out of your animals.
Anyway, a lot of this is just rambling.
Comment