Winter Bale Grazing with Homesteady

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  • Опубліковано 1 лют 2022
  • Kencove hits the road for an in-depth look at winter grazing systems!
    Check out this extended length video team up with Austin from Homesteady and Eli of Mack Farms as they give you an inside look at Winter Bale Grazing.
    Together they cover planning, strategy, and the Kencove equipment they use to get the job done.
    Join the Homesteady Email List to be informed about the Live Show with Eli
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    Check out the Grazing Supplies featured in this video, and your own here:
    Obrien's Geared Reels
    kencove.com/fence/Reels_detai...
    Obrien's Step in Posts
    kencove.com/fence/Step-In+Pos...
    Zammr Handle
    kencove.com/fence/detail.php?...
    Kiwitech
    kencove.com/fence/Kiwitech_pr...
  • Навчання та стиль

КОМЕНТАРІ • 25

  • @candicechristensen1753
    @candicechristensen1753 2 роки тому +6

    This extended video is very interesting. I still have some questions about snow situations, but it really got me thinking about my pasture 👍👍👍 really good video homesteady

    • @mackfarms618
      @mackfarms618 2 роки тому

      We'd be happy to hear any snow related questions. Fire away!

    • @Homesteadyshow
      @Homesteadyshow 2 роки тому +1

      I agree Candice! Love when Eli shares the knowledge!

  • @kari-annereedy5857
    @kari-annereedy5857 Рік тому +1

    The wire down center of the bale is super smart technique keeping the cows from bedding on the hay and keep them eating it and improve the pasture

  • @NJBeachbum12
    @NJBeachbum12 Рік тому +1

    Nice work guys!

  • @MrSchpankme
    @MrSchpankme Рік тому +1

    In the winter months, I feed on the pasture, with off farm purchased, haylage/baylage/silage (call it what you want). To keep the cattle from defecating on the feed, I pull a hot-wire or rope between two ring top posts about 40 feet (12 meters) long, pass loop through hole and over ring to secure, then drop feed (as deep as you want down the length). The cattle will feed, on each side of wire, like a trough. Move the posts for every feeding to spread nutrients across the pasture. This process is adaptable for round-bales. Best regards

  • @revhankreid5843
    @revhankreid5843 2 роки тому +2

    #naturalgramma is watching

  • @troybishoppthegrasswhisper3703
    @troybishoppthegrasswhisper3703 2 роки тому +4

    Great Job men. You know I gotta ask where the grazing chart is??

    • @Homesteadyshow
      @Homesteadyshow 2 роки тому

      Hey Troy! The question I gotta ask… when you coming on my show!?

    • @mackfarms618
      @mackfarms618 2 роки тому

      I have mine at home!

  • @petealberda6307
    @petealberda6307 2 роки тому +3

    How do you unroll a bale when you have a foot of stiff snow like we have in Michigan right now?

    • @mackfarms618
      @mackfarms618 2 роки тому +2

      That's a great question and a realistic one. Some opt to unroll with equipment rather than by hand - That would depend on the amount of snow and capability of the tractor/machine. BUT you do not have to unroll bales when you bale graze. Many farms and ranches choose to set bales up as whole bales and grant access to the bales as they move livestock. I ran into this problem with this past snow storm. We got 10-12" but the drifting was twice that around the bales. In that case I'll let the animals have at it as is. Often my bull will tear into a bale and get it partially rolled out on his own. Animals are still getting fed, it just might cover less surface area or just be a more dense area right around the bales.
      -Eli

  • @susanwolfson1305
    @susanwolfson1305 2 роки тому +1

    Explain how this can work for horses

  • @andersd8956
    @andersd8956 2 роки тому +1

    Where is this?

  • @dansprat
    @dansprat 2 роки тому +1

    Highland Coos are the best

  • @plowboy6386
    @plowboy6386 Рік тому

    Any concerns with bale feeding suppressing growth of existing fescue in the spring ?

    • @mikechaffin3157
      @mikechaffin3157 Рік тому

      Where we unroll bales is where we have the best grass the next spring. Best thing we have done on our farm.

  • @porthos9502
    @porthos9502 2 роки тому +1

    why unroll the bale so they crap on it. why note a ring or feeder so they cant

    • @mackfarms618
      @mackfarms618 2 роки тому +2

      In my context, the litter and manure is part of the equation. I get excited about covering and feeding soil as much as cattle. But we should all be budget-aware with too much wasted or fouled hay. Hay rings are fine if they work for you or have a smaller herd. I found that bales lasted just as long in a ring as they did without. Plus my larger bull/cows would flip the rings out of the way anyhow. So for me, it wasn't worth the time moving rings. Now picture that ranch with 100 head in the herd, how many hay rings would that call for? Moving equipment, rings included, is all part of the budget of labor devoted to the task. Moving enough rings to keep up with 100 cattle is not very efficient. It all comes back to context. What is your context, how many animals, their behavior, your goals, your budget/time, etc?

    • @mackfarms618
      @mackfarms618 2 роки тому +3

      Plus unrolling spreads the impact out more for better distribution of that manure, instead of one heavily impacted ring area. Not to mention unrolling provides a larger surface area access to hay that minimizes bullying or pushing of smaller animals away from the food source. Room for all.

  • @user-tc3ou6sy5f
    @user-tc3ou6sy5f 3 місяці тому

    Fertility..........Sandy ground is sandy ground. There is very little you can do to change its fertility ! Sand aerates the soil causing anything and everything to decompose ! Meaning. Sand will eat itself out of house and home ! This is also true with any soils ! So called regenerative farming .....farmers / ranchers think they can " build " the soils. Very true to an extent. After that...the same is true........the soils eat themselves out of house and home ! Unless you use commercial fertilizers to get an extra "boost " the soils will only produce so much ! This is why farmers do use commercial fertilizers on corn / soybean crops ! Take for example ..... Mr. Glyphosate ( Greg Judy ) ...... He will " never " show an example where he tries to uses.......or experiments with commercial fertilizers ! Because he dont want to shame himself ! By using fertilizers you can nearly double your grass production ! As a dairy farmer Ive dont rotational grazing for years. Tried many ways and things. Open up.........try doing new things ! Dont follow someone on youtube !!