Showing posts with label corn silage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label corn silage. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Dairy Farmer's Thankful Thursday

In a year of extreme rain during the spring that delayed planting
and growth that has occurred in a  drought, we are thankful for this corn 
crop that will be enjoyed by our dairy cows in their daily feed ration.


A twelve row corn harvester certainly speeds up the job compared 
to our smaller chopper.


                                Even though we decided to hire the chopping done,  it was still a 
                                                   family affair to get the crop harvested. 
                                  Ryan and Casey  hauled chopped corn  from  the field to the 
                                  new silage pad while Cody was kept busy packing  each
                                                  delivered load from all the silage trucks.
                                                     The women of the family provided
                                                 love, support and food during the long day.


                                 It was dark when we moved the last truck home, shut gates and
                                 moved cattle back to the pastures but there was a joy and feeling
                                      of  accomplishment that only a farmer understands from 
                                                                 down on the dairy farm.

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

Dairy Farmer's Thankful Thursday

For more than 50 years, corn and other types of grain or grasses have been
harvested and stored in the pit silo.  We have two of these
pit silos  located on the corner of the dairy farm where trucks can back up and unload.
Granddad Grover dug out the first silo on the corner and with the addition of 
more dairy cows, Ryan built the second silo. 
Everyday of the year, our tractor and feed wagon drive to the silo to load silage
that is mixed with other ingredients to provide a nutritious diet
for our dairy herd.


This past week a new chapter for our farm was begun with the 
design of a new concrete slab that will take the place of our pit silos.
Closing of the pit silos is necessary for the proper design of the road  that 
will accommodate the increased traffic of the development just across from
the dairy.  


Even though change is never easy, I am thankful that this change will actually
provide a safer place for us to load silage into the feed wagon and decrease the
chance of a traffic fatality as we strive to work on the farm in an urban environment.



Best of all, our cows will never miss a delicious bite that produces 
the high-quality milk for you and your family!








 

Wednesday, September 26, 2018

Dairymom's Thankful Thursday

We were happy to see Gittlein's custom chopper pull into the first corn field yesterday. 
Harvesting of any crop is a big deal but our corn crop is especially
 important to our dairy cows diet   through the winter and early spring.

All the corn we raise is chopped and hauled from the field to the 
silo on the dairy farm.The chopped corn will go through a
 fermenting process and become the silage that our  dairy cows 
will enjoy eating with other grains and hay.

It was my good fortune to be offered a ride around the field 
with my oldest son Cody.This was our view  of the chopper as 
we drove down the field side by side so the corn could be
 blown from the chopper into the truck.


With three trucks running to haul the corn to the silo,
it gave us opportunity to catch up on a little mother-son communication
 as we waited for our turn to pull up to the chopper.


                                              I'm thankful for the harvest of a good corn crop,
                                      the unexpected opportunities to spend time with my family,
                                                                                  and

                                                           
                                                     to share  life down on the dairy farm
                                                              with multiple generations.

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Dairymom's Thankful Thursday

I'm thankful for the August rain that has made  this second cutting 
of hay grazer forage possible,


brought a smile to the farmer's face when  finding filled out corn ears
 that will soon be turned into feed for our dairy cows,


and

                                                   
                                 provided the opportunity to hear one of Hattie's new words,
                                                                          " rainin' "!

Monday, August 15, 2016

Dairy Farmer Olympics

It's a race to the finish when you are raising a crop that will be fed to your dairy cows. 
The cows are counting on us! 
Each phase of crop production
--soil preparation,planting,harvesting-- 
is part of the relay race.

We began the harvest relay of our corn crop yesterday. 
It's being chopped and hauled to the silo so that it can ferment and
 be fed to our dairy cows  as corn silage.



  Sometimes the farmer  loses the race for 
no fault of his own because of  uncontrollable  factors like weather but  
like the Olympians we've been watching this week, 
farmers don't quit till the end of the race.

                                         My dairy farm Olympics experience tells me that we
                                          will have a few slow starts during  the harvest relay
                                                                 but like true Olympians,
                                    we can enjoy the rewards of hard work at the end of the race.
                                         

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Dairy Farmers Committed to Community




Our neighbor's corn didn't check the calendar for the July 4th holiday schedule so Ryan and the boys spent most of the day chopping the corn and hauling it to our neighbor's farm. It's definitely not a good corn crop but any crop is better than none when you are experiencing a season of drought.


It was a typical hot,dusty July 4th!


 The drought we're experiencing in Northwest Arkansas makes harvesting any crop crucial and it's definitely the time for farmers to work together  to harvest available feed for our animals.

 Working with our neighbor to provide feed for his cattle is a great example of how our contributions to the local economy are measured not only in dollars and cents, but also in the well-being of the community where we live and work. 

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Challenges and Opportunities of Drought

























Many of the old timers in our area believe that one weather extreme follows another. This year is proving them right. After receiving thirty inches of rain in May which delayed our crop planting and hay harvesting, we are now in a drought. Our corn is still growing but if it doesn't receive rain at the right time, it will not make enough feed for what our dairy cows will need in their diet plan. Looking ahead at the possibility of needing more corn, we found another farmer in the area who is willing to sell his corn crop now that he had intended to be picked later in the season. Due to the drought his corn crop will not make enough corn for picking. Farmers work every day to make the best of what ever challenge is presented.






Our corn chopper and trucks pulled into the field late this afternoon to get started on the chopping. It was 100 degrees in the shade. The corn is chopped into small pieces and blown into the truck. The truck will haul it to our silo at the dairy where it will be stored and go through a fermentation process that changes it to silage.






No farmer is happy with this dry weather, but farmers try to make the best of every situation. In my opinion, that must be a special trait that God has given them!

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Trait of a Farmer



Weather patterns everywhere have been unusual this year. In May our crop planting was delayed because we had thirty inches of rain with flooding. In the last thirty days, we have had less than an inch. Every year we grow one hundred acres of corn that will be made into corn silage for our dairy cows. This corn silage will be added to all the other feed ingredients that we purchase to make a completely balanced diet for our cows to enjoy throughout the year. High quality milk from our dairy cows occurs because of the nutritious ingredients in their diet.



One of my jobs yesterday was to help move spray equipment to the corn field. It was at least one hundred degrees,humid and steamy in the corn field.
Spraying a corn field for weed eradication usually happens earlier and in cooler weather but one of the lessons I have learned with farming is that the conditions or circumstances that we work with are not always perfect. Weather is definitely a condition beyond our control.



As I watched Ryan moving through the field on the old John Deere spray rig, I thought how amazing the American farmer is in the best or worst conditions. Farmers are dedicated to protecting the land,air ,and water while producing the most abundant,affordable and available food for Americans and the world by using sound science and modern technology and if you need a dose of optimism, find a farmer to talk to--he's got it!