The Northeast US and Canada are sitting under their own personal rain cloud. A number of farms are facing a corn crop half planted and hay crop ready to harvest and little or no sun in the forecast. The more successful farms are using one pass minimum tillage or one pass deep zone tillage that is set for shallow (6 inch) depth. That allowed them to slip in acreage on the few sunny days. Those who took advantage of fall killing their sods are successfully no till planting.
Tom
April, 2011 / Fertilize Grasses and Winter Triticale NOW!
Yes, the cost of nitrogen is up, but not as much as the cost of soybean meal. Dairy animals need protein, and you can either buy it or grow it. If you check back on the January 2011 newsletter on the web site, you will see that it is cheaper to grow protein in forage, especially with legumes. When we checked in 2001, it was cheaper to grow protein than buy soy. Our recalculation in 2011 shows the same. Keep in mind that the graph presented has all the cost being borne by the protein in the plant. Both legumes and grasses have 85 – 90% of the energy level of corn silage if harvested correctly.
February, 2011 / The Ugly Duckling Forage
Red clover has the reputation of an ugly duckling. “Isn’t that the wet slop we quit growing a number of years ago?” Unfortunately, because of this attitude, many farms are attempting to grow alfalfa on ground that will not support alfalfa. The stands only last 1 – 2 years before they thin to less than 50% legume and expensive nitrogen additions are needed to keep the field productive (note: I did not say profitable).
January, 2011 / Finding Profit In Dairy Farming
First low milk price, then as it started to increase, the cost of grains have shot through the roof. How do you get your income out of this cost price squeeze? To maximize production, dairy cows need a balanced nutrition meeting their protein and energy needs, in an effective fiber mix, at lowest cost, while the
animal is in a comfortable environment.
December, 2010 / Critical Limit to High Forage Yield
As more farms successfully move to the profitability of high (>60%) forage and very high (>70%) forage diets; the forage production becomes ever more critical.
Legume production is key to 1: reducing the need for expensive soy meal whose protein costs 3x more than protein from alfalfa (lower cost of producing milk); 2: high nitrogen prices – legumes can fix a tremendous amount of nitrogen/a/ year compared to grass stands that need purchased N; 3: first year rotated corn after legume needs no additional side dressed nitrogen.
November, 2010 / Corn Population – Are You Missing Yield?
In the effort to save on seed costs, some farms are reducing the plants/acre in their stand. The comments often come in regard to the BMR or leafy types that they do best at lower populations. This may not be the most economical move based on an excellent study by Dr. Cox and his staff at Cornell.
October, 2010 / Time to Rethink Your Corn Silage Variety Selection
Corn silage is the premier high energy feed on most dairy farms. In corn silage, 55 – 60% is true forage and so fiber digestibility is a key factor in selection for your farm. Normal corn varieties will range 5 – 6 units of NDFd while BMR types add another 5 – 6 units of variability. For every 1 unit increase in NDFd, you gain .55 lbs of 4.0 fat corrected milk. Thus many farms have selected for high digestible fiber and a large number are planting Brown Mid Rib even where they have a greater chance of taking a significant yield hit.
September, 2010 / Key Fall Management Steps
It is not too late to help legumes overwinter. In a summary of soil samples in an Eastern NY county, (Graph # 1) shows that 55% of the fields soil tested, would NOT respond to more potassium fertilizer. Many of these fields are corn fields with manure as 30 tons applies over 250 lbs of potash/acre.
August, 2010 / New Cut Length for Corn
The range of weather conditions from wet to dry has left a wide range of corn maturities. Some sat for 3 weeks waiting for rain before growing. Others had adequate moisture and are maturing early. If you have been in the wetter area, start checking when the corn reaches ½ milk line. For the drier areas, check when 1/4 milk line.
July, 2010 / Double Crop for Forage Better than BMR Corn
Most farms look at maximizing yield by growing the longest season corn possible. Data presented in the November 2009 Crop Soil News showed that there often isn’t a significant yield difference between very long and moderate full season (eg 110 and 95 day corn) grown properly. Longer means in increasing risk from weather as full season may not have enough summer to properly mature (2009) or get caught with increasingly wet soils September into October (2006). This year looks like not only will it mature, but possibly be early.