As we finished Ai’ing the cows we put the Hereford bulls in to serve the cows for another 4/5 weeks and the daily workload shifts focus on to other areas of the farm.

We have done a third cut of silage and now have two full clamps filled, very much the same position of 2018 in June. This is the only similarity of 2018/2019 in 2018 we silaged late May then early June, we could feel the grass growth starting to slow as the onset of the drought started. We opened the clamp up on the 25th June 18 and started buffer feeding the cows twice a day (for which felt like an eternity). 2019 is a total different beast so far in June, we have had 133mm of rain which has been awesome, our average monthly growth rate per day is 73kgs dm/ha compared to 31kgs dm/ha in 2018.


We have grazed the 12ha reseed which was sown in May and watched the cows respond to the new seeds with the extra white stuff in the tank.

We have purchased a 2k gallon Hi Spec slurry tanker which will give us opportunity to follow the cows as paddocks are grazed, rather than just using contractors with umbilical slurry system.

Cows
The cows have been milking very well doing over 2kg milksolids per day and we continue to feed 2kgs of 14% cake within the parlour. During the very wet period for 5 days we put in an extra 1 kgs of cake to help the cows get the fill they needed whilst grazing wet low dry matter grass. We have 44 summer calvers that start to calve in July.

Grass
We continue to follow the cows with an application of blend putting on 20kgs Nitrogen per ha. During some of the heavy rain we grazed poorly when we had 75mm of rain in 4 days, paddocks that were grazed with a higher post residual would be grazed with a lower cover next round or be silaged to reset the residual. We have grown 8.43 tonnes/ha to date (17/7) which compared to the whole of 2018 of 9.98 tonnes/ha. Our average tonnes/ha grown over 5 years is 12.02 t/ha, which is 2014 -2018 seasons.
We have an average farm cover of 2446 and the growth rate has slowed to 34kgs dm/ha, not to panic as we have 160 ha to graze and we are stocked at a sensible 2.5 cows to hectare and some really good quality grass to go at.
We cut 160 acres on July 3rd and half filled the third clamp, very much a large area covered but lower covers to make sure we have quality for the cows to graze, we have had a bit more rain and weather looks inclement for the next 24hrs so fingers crossed that we get a bit more.

Calves
All calves are at grass with 81 weaned and wormed / vecoxanned and weighed on the 2nd July with an average weight of 136kgs. We have 80 Hereford calves that are at grass and being fed 1kgs of cake and also 21 March born heifers with them also. Due to TB we have had to keep the April born Herefords.

2018 vs 2019
2018 was a tough year for farmers in all sectors, especially livestock farmers and more so with grass based systems, the pressure and stress it put on everyone through the prolonged drought period was immense. It felt like we never stopped feeding, you never appreciate a simple system fully till you have to complicate it on a daily basis. It was mentally tiring and depressing and its taken some time to get my mojo back to be honest and I am a very very positive person who is a cup half full guy. It makes you question things and understand your stocking rate situation and makes you ask yourselves are you walking the line and are you being a busy fool, just remember you must farm to your farm and the ultimate goal is happiness in the end, is it necessary to put the system and everyone under more pressure for marginal gains. My answer is no, but its each to there own and what drives you may be different to my views.
We can look back on 2018 as a one in 40 year phenomenon or we plan for it more often by having an insurance policy in place with feed in the bank, but we have to appreciate the cost in doing so and its down to the individual business to either be risky or risk adverse, I know where I stand. I think we had a lucky winter after the 2018 drought, all cows out in February and a easy grassy spring which we have never looked back from really, only trying to look into the crystal ball to see if there would be in sting in the tail in June / July or it may still come?
I have never felt so much like the ants in Aesop’s fable this year, with thinking about filling those clamps to cover our insurance policy for winter or if we needed to feed out sooner. #dontbeagrasshopper
The moral of the story is that if you want to succeed tomorrow, you have to start working today. Those who do not plan for the long term will not succeed in the long term.
Its been a perfect year so far, so I hope it continues for all as we head towards August and start thinking ” where has 2019 gone already?”





