Friday, August 26, 2011

Silo Daydreaming...

After a few hiccups getting started (sudden wagon wheel spindle breaking in particular) we've gotten a bit of corn chopped.  My job is driving the silage wagons to and from the fields and unloading them at the silo.  Part of that time I spend looking up.

farm silo

As crazy as it sounds, as a child I daydreamed about living in a silo.  Totally impractical, I know.  I thought it would be neat to have all those rooms going up, but I never could decide on an elevator or a spiral staircase.

My kids might enjoy the idea of living in a silo just so they could really really pretend they were playing Rapunzel.  But I don't think my better half would ever go for that.  Besides, the cows are pretty fond of how we use the silos now so I suppose we'll just leave it at that.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

End of the Season

Everyone has different signs they notice for the ending of the summer season.  Grateful moms might be delighted by the beginning of school.  Big and little boys might be anticipating the coming of college and high school football.  Here on the farm I always make a connection with the beginning of our silage harvest.

This year we have three fields of corn, and one each of sudan sorghum and pearl millet. We've already got our chopper and wagons out.  We had to change a bearing on one of the wagons that went out on the last day of chopping this spring.  After greasing all the machinery and checking the air in the tires we went to the field for a trial run.

tractor chopping corn wagon

Tomorrow we'll be raising the silo unloader and getting the blower ready.  The silage we harvest now will feed our cows through the winter, and if we're really lucky, until the end of spring.  The cows are eating this spring's wheat right now, and I'm sure they'll be glad to chomp into some new feed.

Friday, August 12, 2011

Calves Are The Future


cow and calf

There's not much better to happen on a dairy farm than having a new heifer calf born.  This one was really good because the cow needed no assistance with the birth and the calf, after the first few wobbly steps, immediately began nursing. With hard work and a little bit of luck this calf will grow up to join the milking herd just like her mother.

Caring for and nurturing calves is one of the most important jobs on a dairy farm. Research shows that how well we raise her will impact her potential milk production.  With that in mind, we will do all we can to help her do her best because calves are the future.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Healthy and Content Cows

dairy cow eating


Every mom and dad's parenting style is a little different but they they all have one goal: healthy, happy, smart kids.  Dairy farmers also have different production techniques, whether they be big or small or organic or not.  At the end of the day they all aim for healthy and content cows.

It saddens me when I read about or hear people talk about misinformation or misconceptions on dairy farming.  I wrote down a few of the common things I hear about so I could give a view from my side of fence.

Cows get daily doses of antibiotics.

People, like cows, get sick.  A few weeks ago I had a sinus infection with a fever so bad my doctor had no choice but to give me antibiotics so I could recover.  Dairy farmers don't want to give antibiotics to cows unless they must be administered.  If we give a cow antibiotics for any reason we cannot sell her milk.  This treated cow is losing us money because her milk is bad.  We have an on farm test kit that we use to check milk for antibiotics.  When it is out of her system and out of her milk we can then begin selling her milk.  If we do so before hand we will face large penalties.  So just as a human doctor has to decide when antibiotics are worthwhile for the patient, dairy farmers also have to be cautious in their use.

Dairy cattle are force fed highly concentrated feed.

Outside of Olympic athletes and people with medical problems, how many people do you know that have a nutritionist plan out their diet?  Most dairy farms use a nutritionist to balance a ration for their cows.  Our local farm cooperative takes samples of our farm grown feeds and helps us choose other feedstuffs for the cows to keep them healthy.  If you have an unhealthy diet you feel sick, and so would our cows if we didn't feed them properly.

Cows don't eat what they don't like.  For instance I fed some hay today that had some large stems in the center of the bale.  The cows left those stems in the manger.  You can't force a cow to eat what they don't want and expect good results.

Cows are kept in intensely close quarters developing and spreading disease.

If this were true then the cows' milk production would slowly decrease until it finally dried up and the farm would go out of business. When cows are kept up the farmers have the aim of keeping them more healthy.  With good management these animals can have a clean place to lay down in and they are also exposed to less extremes of the weather.  If the cows are not in a healthy environment they will not make milk and the farmer will not be able to survive.

On our farm the cows spend most of their time on pasture between milkings and this works well for our animals.  Sometimes I would like to be able to put our animals up for different reasons and other times I'm glad they are where they are.  There are different management strategies on each farm in order to achieve the same goal: healthy cows. What works for one may not work for another.

Dairy farmers depend on the health and welfare of their cows in order to make a living.  If the cows are discontented or unhealthy they will not produce milk.  We are constantly looking for new and better methods of management to improve our herds.  We are all aiming for the same goal: healthy and content cows.