Íæż½ã½ã

In Your Field: Ian Garnett - 'Second cut silage was proving challenging'

Well, we wanted rain and now we arguably have a little too much. Combines in Cheshire have hardly turned a wheel.

clock • 2 min read
In Your Field: Ian Garnett - 'Second cut silage was proving challenging'

That said, due to some helpful alliances with contractors, we have managed a busy month. Second cut silage was proving challenging to the extent we were mowing one day in the rain followed by a dry day, then a wet day as this was the only way we could harvest. Yields were most sobering and helped to bring us down to earth after generous first cuts.

Winter dry cow diet management can prove challenging, especially as we try our best to make high production feedstuffs through the year to maximise output, however dry cow feed ideally needs to be the complete opposite.

For us, a dedicated area of stewardship-type ground provided an opportunity to create a dry cow diet that ticked the box. Waiting for maturing grass and reasonable weather is worthwhile, however a short window this time around required us to be ready at the drop of a hat.

That same window allowed us to combine our modest area of winter barley and bale the straw.

Normally, forage rape would be sown but last year's frost damage made me wonder whether we ought to try forage rye instead, providing a useful winter bite and stewardship credentials to boot.

Managing grazing has without doubt been a case of famine throughout last month, with silage from last year in the summer clamps being brought out to bridge the gap. Once the rain made the grass grow again, we pre-mowed as much of the grazing block as we felt was necessary. This process has effectively dealt with the seed heads and kick-started the pastures.

It seems the ideal is to measure the grass at pre-mow stage, then after the milking portion have moved on, tidy up with dry stock. The more accurate the measure, the more effective the whole process. What you can't measure, you can't manage.

The seemingly relentless quest from society to reduce livestock emissions has resulted in the idea to potentially cull thousands of dairy cows in Ireland. When we compare the growth in air travel and car usage in the past half-century with the efficiencies made in dairy farming in the same period, I am at a loss to understand why the pressure on food production seems far more draconian than that on transportation.

I wonder if those who are trying to manage food inflation are aware of the possible ramifications of the proposed culling. Surely it is not their intention to inflate the price of locally produced food thereby encouraging 'cheap' imports from regions where the production methods are potentially much less sustainable than those where the culls have taken place. Everybody, sooner or later, sits down to a banquet of consequences.

NEW Strickworth 3 Ton Diesel Forklift Trucks

£±Ê°¿´¡

Vicon Haybob

£±Ê°¿´¡

2020 MALONE TEDD AIR 4 ROTOR TEDDER

£±Ê°¿´¡

More on In your field

In your field: Kate Rowell - "We've just been away on honeymoon  – only 25 years after the wedding"

In your field: Kate Rowell - "We've just been away on honeymoon – only 25 years after the wedding"

Kate is a fifth-generation farmer running the 750-hectare (1,853-acre) Hundleshope Farm on the Haystoun Estate, Peebles, where the family have been tenants for 150 years. She runs the hill unit with her husband Ed and their four children. She is also a vet and chair of Quality Meat Scotland.

clock 12 October 2024 • 3 min read
In your field: James and Isobel Wright - "Right now, trust in the SFI system is low"

In your field: James and Isobel Wright - "Right now, trust in the SFI system is low"

James and Isobel, with their two young children, recently bought their first farm, and plan to run beef and sheep over 13.8 hectares (34 acres), renting a further 44.5ha (110 acres). James works for tech firm Breedr as UK country manager. You can follow them on Twitter @jpbwfarm

clock 07 October 2024 • 2 min read
In your field: Dan Jones - "Livestock attacks are all too common. How is it that we are facing these heartbreaking scenes over and over?"

In your field: Dan Jones - "Livestock attacks are all too common. How is it that we are facing these heartbreaking scenes over and over?"

Dan Jones farms 650 ewes at the National Trust-owned Parc Farm, which sits on the Great Orme, a limestone headland which rises up 208 metres (682 feet) on the North Wales coast near Llandudno. His Farm Business Tenancy covers the 58 hectares (143 acres) at Parc Farm, plus 364ha (900 acres) of grazing rights on the hill

clock 30 September 2024 • 2 min read