Grassland
Ciarán measured grass on the farm on 9th June. There was a farm cover of 837 kg DM/ha, with a growth rate of 51 kg DM/ha and a demand of 42 kg DM/ha. There were 20 days of grass ahead. Based on this, 3 paddocks could be taken out for silage to reduce the pre-grazing yield to 1400 kg DM/ha (# 22A, 22B and 8A). This would leave a farm cover of 671 kg DM/ha, a growth rate of 38 kg DM/ha, demand of 42 kg DM/ha and 16 days ahead.
Proinnsias plans to cut his first cut silage in the coming week as soon as weather allows. This is important for making the best quality silage as most of these fields were not grazed in the spring.
Three paddocks were cut for silage on 3rd June and they averaged 9 bales of silage/acre (52 bales total).
There are currently 4 groups of stock grazing on the farm – 29 store cattle, 16 yearlings, 21 yearlings and 48 calves. Ideally cattle should only spend 3 days per paddock to avoid eating re-growths and maximise grass growth on the farm. For the 29 store cattle, their ideal paddock size is 0.6 ha (1.47 acres). The average size of Proinnsias’s paddocks on the farm is 0.62 ha which matches up very well. The average paddock size required for the 16 yearlings to graze covers of 1400 kg DM/ha in 3 days is 0.24 ha (0.6 acres) which means that cattle spend just under 8 days per paddock. The following options could help this:
- Group the 37 yearlings together to graze paddocks faster
- Split each paddock into 3 divisions and back fence to prevent grazing of regrowths
- Keep smaller bunches of stock on the smaller paddocks (0.3ha or 0.4ha)
The ideal paddock size for the calves is 0.31 ha (0.76 acres). Again the average paddock size on the farm is quite big for them and they would spend over 6 days grazing one paddock. This could be changed by splitting the paddocks in two, or by grazing them ahead of the store or yearling cattle. This would give them access to the best grass and the older cattle would clean off the fields better.