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

Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Drought in a Season of Blessings



Drought---it's defined as a prolonged dry period in the natural
climate cycle that can occur anywhere in the world.
It's happening in Northwest Arkansas!
Last week, our area was declared a drought area --D2 --to
be specific.
As you can see all around us--the color is brown.
Brown grass and brown trees.
Ponds are extremely low or dried up.

                                    
                                We actually moved beef cows from this pasture last week 
                                      because of very little water.  Even though there
                            is still water in the pond, the water quality has diminished.
                                 Hay feeding has been a daily job for several weeks.


Even during drought periods there are blessings.
At the beginning of this drought period when the grass
still had a little green color, we were able to chop the
corn for silage.  This silage will be used in our
feed ration and will definitely help provide nutrition 
and help stretch our hay supply.

                                
                                        Blessings come in all sizes---like finding a buyer
                          for our large milk tank.  It left for another dairy farm today!
                                                         

Even during drought--we are blessed with new life on the farm!


                                  A highlight and for sure a blessing during this drought--
                                                               a wedding!

                       We've been showered with blessings during this season of drought!
                              
                                                   

Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Dairy Farmer's Thankful Thursday


Our "rain, rain go away" chant  just didn't work!
For at least three weeks we have been hoping to see the
custom chopper pull into the fields for the spring harvest 
of our wheat crop but when the fields were too water logged
 for chopping it was decided that we would be cutting,
 baling and wrapping this wheat crop.

Harvest began today with the cutting of the first wheat field.
Hattie and Breck became part of the harvest crew. 


Their smiles during the tractor ride definitely provided the sunshine today!


I'm thankful for the wheat crop that is still able to be harvested
and used  to feed our cows and calves
and


                                       for the forever flexible farmers that never give up!

Wednesday, October 2, 2019

Dairy Farmer's Thankful Thursday

It's corn  chopping time!
You may not get all excited when you see this picture but
to the family farmers and our dairy cows, harvest of this 
corn crop is  a real celebration.
  Raising a crop that  both  utilizes manure produced by the cows and 
  feeds our cows is part of the sustainability of our farming operation. 

The chopped corn is being trucked to the pit silo where it will 
ferment  for a few weeks and change into corn silage.
 Corn silage is a welcome addition to the cows' diet plan.

               
                                      I'm thankful for the cooperation of the weather this week,
                             for no major mechanical problems, and the safety of the trucks and
                                                           drivers on the trips to the silo.

Thursday, November 29, 2018

Dairymom's Thankful Thursday

Thanksgiving has come and gone but
it has left a great appreciation for all the blessings 
we enjoy on the ordinary days down on the dairy farm.
Enthusiasm for eating is obvious at the feed wagon
or the family table!


I'm thankful for the crop growing season and harvest 
of the crops  that has produced 
the silage and hay that our dairy cows are enjoying each day.

Thursday, June 2, 2016

Dairymom's Thankful Thursday

Planning a harvest time for any crop can be tricky when the weatherman
 is predicting a chance of rain everyday.
When it looked like we might have a day of sunny weather  to allow
 just enough drying time before chopping and hauling to the silo,
 the mowing began


Watching this process is fascinating when it goes according to the plan.
Most of the crop was hauled to the silo but  when mechanical
 issues stopped the process,

I'm thankful 


we still managed to harvest the crop by 


changing the plan to  wrapping and baling.

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Dairymom's Thankful Thursday


                                                         Happy Fall,Y'all!
                                                        
                                        I love these seasonal transitions down on the dairy farm.
                                          Even though  there's a little bit of farmer frenzy as they
                                   work to finish harvesting the hay and silage crops before winter,
                                                   
                                              I'm thankful for the abundance of hay that will
                                                     feed our cows and calves this winter,


the cooler weather for our calves,


and


                                         the beauty of summer flowers that brighten the fall days.

Sunday, May 11, 2014

Rollin' On the Dairy

We're rollin' on  the dairy...spring harvest of rye and wheat has begun!
Part of the crop is being chopped and hauled from the field to the silo but the rest of it will be wrapped in plastic and allowed to ferment for feeding later in the year.
 
 
I was called to field duty late Saturday afternoon to assist in getting the last few bales hauled home to be wrapped.  Once we got to the wrapper, my job was to stand by the wrapper and be ready to push the STOP button if needed. Fortunately, everything worked properly and I did not get in trouble for doing the wrong thing!
 
 
It wasn't a bit hard to enjoy the afternoon sunshine with a thankful heart for this crop that will provide nutritious feed for our dairy cows.
 Working with my family while we're Rollin' on the Dairy is just one of the perks for living and working on our family dairy farm.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Celebrating Drought's Harvest

"Happy as a termite in a lumber mill" was the perfect description of the dairy farmers this week when  chopping sorghum and hauling it to the silo. Planted in late June with only a hope of rain during a drought, this field is proof of a dairy  farmer's faith and determination. It was exciting to see the chopper make the first round in the field and watch the truck fill up with chopped green feed that will become part of the nutritious diet for our dairy cows.













After the sorghum is cut and hauled to the pit silo, it is packed down with a tractor and then allowed to ferment. The fermentation process changes the sorghum to silage. Samples of the silage will be analyzed to provide nutrition information that will be used by our dairy nutritionist to formulate a balanced diet for our cows.






 

While our pastures turned brown and other crops burned up in this season of drought, this sorghum field held its own and continued to grow in spite of the dry conditions. Even the sorghum won't yield as much as in a normal year and is less mature than we would like, we feel fortunate to have a crop to harvest.


 Harvesting a crop is truly a celebration for us in this year of drought!