I know many farmers do this differently, so I wonder others do this
I know many farmers do this differently, so I wonder others do this
here’s how I’d lay it out nice and simple like we’d talk in the shed: If you’re on a 20–30 day round in spring that’s usually good the grass is flying then and you can get them back around before it gets away from you. In summer when it slows right down stretch it out to 30–40 days give the paddocks time to bounce back especially if it’s hot and dry
Autumn tighten back to around 25–30 days so you can set up covers for winter and don’t go into winter with paddocks hammered
Winter depends on your ground and weather some folks go out for a graze in the afternoon then bring them in at night so you don’t pug the paddocks some even go 60–70 day rotations to protect the grass
Key is keep watching growth rates if the grass is jumping shorten the round if it’s crawling lengthen it the schedule’s just a guide the paddock will tell you the truth
here’s how I’d lay it out nice and simple like we’d talk in the shed: If you’re on a 20–30 day round in spring that’s usually good the grass is flying then and you can get them back around before it gets away from you. In summer when it slows right down stretch it out to 30–40 days give the paddocks time to bounce back especially if it’s hot and dry
Autumn tighten back to around 25–30 days so you can set up covers for winter and don’t go into winter with paddocks hammered
Winter depends on your ground and weather some folks go out for a graze in the afternoon then bring them in at night so you don’t pug the paddocks some even go 60–70 day rotations to protect the grass
Key is keep watching growth rates if the grass is jumping shorten the round if it’s crawling lengthen it the schedule’s just a guide the paddock will tell you the truth