Originally posted by the big wheel
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Originally posted by flea beetle View PostJust give it a minute… you can tell he is still processing like an old Commodore 64.
I have no idea what you’re really asking even I was talking
About water I have no idea how many bales or what he paid
For them.
But to use your meth induced logic he should buy enough
230 dollar bales for next year as well because they might be
300 next year? Especially since we all know what the weather
Will be next year, this fall, this winter?
I give up you are one smart dude you win.
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Originally posted by the big wheel View PostYou got me man!!!
I have no idea what you’re really asking even I was talking
About water I have no idea how many bales or what he paid
For them.
But to use your meth induced logic he should buy enough
230 dollar bales for next year as well because they might be
300 next year? Especially since we all know what the weather
Will be next year, this fall, this winter?
I give up you are one smart dude you win.
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After the 1995 drought our farm has always kept provisions for a year ahead. Lots of straw and barley as it keeps longer than hay or greenfeed. Silage would be ideal but not enough cattle for that. All said I’m more worried about grass never growing next season. Already in the works to cut herd 15% this fall through heavy cull and probably another 7% after calving. Days past we would fight tooth and nail to get them through, find grass on the reserve too. It never ended up we made out well and those were days when cows made reasonable returns vs expenses. I just am not feeling the love like I once did for the industry. I just get this feeling it’s on the way out unless you can do something different with it. The old generation is on the way out and the next is hanging by a thread. It’s like being the typical Catholic suffering through life to hope for death to end it. Lol. Numbers have been shrinking for years and best seen by feeders feeding calves to record weights. Every trauma producers face shaves more off the herd and no one replaces the numbers. Aside from this drought this industry is shrinking and will continue. It is already pushed back to the land only suited for cows.
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I fully admit I don't have two years of hay and don’t know when I’ll get there if ever. Hard with rapidly expanding animal numbers and limited funds.
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