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Feeding cost comparison

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    Feeding cost comparison

    Did some calculations this morning on the cost of
    tractor feeding the cows versus bale grazing type
    systems and would be interested to hear others
    perspectives and costs.
    Our system once we are feeding is silage and/or hay
    and/or straw. Cows and weaned calves are all fed out
    on pasture with moveable feed bunks/rings and
    windbreaks as this serves the joint purpose of intense
    land/grass improvement as well as feeding.

    So there is a tractor - I've allowed $30k every 10
    years to buy it, own it, insure it , maintain and repair
    it and assume a zero value at the end (I think this is
    probably a higher figure than it need be) The entire
    tractor cost is allocated to winter feeding in this
    example.
    cost per animal/per day fed 7.5c.

    Fuel cost to feed the cattle 3.5c/day/per animal fed.

    Cost of running gas heat in a quonset to keep 1
    tractor, 1 truck, 1 dog and a few small calves warm
    1.5c/day/animal fed

    Silage wagon - buy it, repair it, maintain it and
    depreciate to zero over 15 years (although after 12 it
    still works as good as it ever did) @1c/day/animal.

    Inventory of feed rings depreciated to zero after 10
    years (about right) windbreaks and feed bunks
    depreciated to zero after 20 years (probably only
    need new wood by then) Total cost @1.5c/day/animal
    fed.

    Total 15c/day.

    Now for the biggie - labor. Feeding 100 animals/hour
    giving the feed hauling I'm doing and charging
    $20/hr works out to 19c/day/animal fed for a grand
    total of 34c/day/animal fed.

    I'd like to see figures for bale grazing type systems
    with the cost of their tractor ownership factored in
    if you have one - even if it sits in the shop most of
    the winter there is still a substantial cost to
    ownership.

    Thinking through these figures I don't see the
    advantage to incurring greater wastage through a
    bale grazing system other than the labor element.
    But how real is the labor cost factor?
    It doesn't matter too much to me if it takes 3 hours or
    1 hour to feed the cows as I'm not doing an off farm
    job in the 2 hours I might save by changing the
    system. If you save time by moving fence on bales
    once a week versus daily feeding but spend more
    time sitting in the house reading you aren't really
    making any more money are you? It's a lifestyle
    choice and nothing wrong with that.
    I'm more inclined when planning systems to use just
    the cash costs - tractor, diesel etc and not add in
    labor. Then at the end of the year decide when we
    made $xxx how well i'm getting paid for my time.
    That doesn't mean I'm working for free or not
    counting my time. I'm just not adding it in at $20 an
    hour for this one small component of the overall
    business.
    Any thoughts?
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