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sheepwheat grass may be of interest kill sheet

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    #16
    Malle not questioning just pointing out you have 103000 in wool sales here 0 i dont see where you have an allowance for replacements,25,30%. here 6 mo feed i guess she wastes feed but seems like 7#/head/day thats on self feed as she needs to have an off farm job to enjoy her sheep,
    Whats DSEs

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      #17
      DSE - Dry sheep/shearling equivalent? = 1 two year old sheep.

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        #18
        Originally posted by Horse View Post
        Malle not questioning just pointing out you have 103000 in wool sales here 0 i dont see where you have an allowance for replacements,25,30%. here 6 mo feed i guess she wastes feed but seems like 7#/head/day thats on self feed as she needs to have an off farm job to enjoy her sheep,
        Whats DSEs
        Its called a self replacing merino flock

        1000 ewes think it says 950 lambs

        So 475 ewe lambs 475 wether lambs

        Wether lambs sold

        Ewe lambs kept on and culls sold as hogget think it says 200 sales.

        Each year you sell of old ewes and replace with younger ones and have ewe lambs as well....clear as mud?

        DSE dry sheep equivalent.

        Stocking rate refers to the number of livestock on a paddock or a whole farm and is expressed as an indication of number of a particular type of animal per unit area. The usual measure is dry sheep equivalents (DSE) per hectare (ha), however, this may also be expressed in terms of cattle per unit area, such as breeders (cattle) per ha or square kilometre.

        Dry sheep equivalent and stocking density
        A DSE is used as a method of standardising an animal unit and is the amount of feed required by a two year old, 50kg Merino wether to maintain its weight. Applying this principle, one 50kg dry goat is equivalent to one DSE and one yearling steer is equivalent to about 8 DSE, whereas a lactating cow may be equivalent to as much as 25 DSE.

        Stocking density (head/ha) refers to the number of stock per hectare on a grazing area or unit at any one time and is usually used to describe the number of stock per unit area in a high-density grazing situation.

        One Dry Sheep Equivalent (DSE) represents the
        consumption of 1 kg dry weight (also called dry
        matter DM) of pasture. In other words,
        1 DSE = 1 kg pasture dry weight eaten each day.
        One kilogram of pasture dry weight (also called
        herbage mass) of average quality contains the
        energy required for a mature 50 kg wether or dry
        ewe to maintain its bodyweight.

        Class of stock DSE rating Daily intake of pasture dry
        weight (kg DM/day)
        30 kg lamb growing at 50 g/day 0.9 dse
        50 kg wether maintaining weight 1 dse
        60 kg ewe with twin lambs 3 dse
        300 kg steer growing at 1 kg/day 10 dse
        500 kg cow with new calf at foot 16 dse
        Last edited by malleefarmer; Jan 21, 2019, 01:07.

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          #19
          Originally posted by grassfarmer View Post
          So you don't have any carcass conformation classes? only fat cover is used to classify even lambs?
          basically yeah

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