Please, in 35 days, show the mistake plot from today's video. Bet it will come back beautifully.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@user-kv2pt4lu9y I think you’re gonna be right!
@petereldracher566015 күн бұрын
This has happened to me and its actually not as bad as it looks. Just let it rest. It actually shows the immense power of the grazing herd as a tool and demostrates how a subtle change in management can leave a dramatic impact. Youre still doing a great job. Dont sweat it, there is so much seed on that grass and you have your recovery long enough to where it will be fine.
@drumhillerfarms685815 күн бұрын
@@petereldracher5660 thanks for the kind words!
@moonvalleypermaculture128116 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing the ups and downs. Always appreciate the content.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@moonvalleypermaculture1281 thansk
@brandondunn297816 күн бұрын
Don’t sweat it brotha! The Lord knows we aren’t gonna be perfect and he made Mother Nature very resilient to bounce back from our learning episodes!
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@brandondunn2978 amen! To that bro
@TimBinns6816 күн бұрын
We just had a similar situation with not so good forage. I'm reclaiming old pasture that was brush hogged clear of willow brush last summer. The first few cells of that land this year they did awesome eating back the new willow growth, but the last cell, not so much. They were mad at me before they went in and pretty much refused to eat it, so we moved them to the best area we have to get the gut working again. I'm very new to this and learning every day also.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@TimBinns68 always learning !
@jameskoebke577615 күн бұрын
I had a similar situation last year, all back to normal and maybe better. Not a mistake! Give it rest it’ll be fine.
@drumhillerfarms685815 күн бұрын
@@jameskoebke5776 definitely!
@runningtfarmsnc15 күн бұрын
Great job! That spot will recover! Not ideal of course but it’s not a perfect world 😂 Keep calm and graze on!👍👍
@drumhillerfarms685815 күн бұрын
@@runningtfarmsnc thanks buddy!
@chrisstengren899516 күн бұрын
Soooo…mad respect for you and your regenerative farmer cohorts…..conventional ag has had generations of land grant university research (us here it’s MSU and they do doo great work actually) and certainly the USDuh interference and the farm lobby bull crap too…but you pioneers soldier on and without a lot of good research but wisdom and intuition from others and your own brave hard work in that regard too….so I like to see vids like this…it shows you care about your operation….you do have a lot of success and this situation-it did rain a lot here 125 miles NW of you-will surely give you a lot of wisdom….good fortune to ya ….ya legend
@drumhillerfarms685815 күн бұрын
@@chrisstengren8995 thank you very much for those words
@freddieconner-ey2xs16 күн бұрын
Awesome video brother,mistakes makes us better ,we all make them ,that’s what I appreciate about yours and Josh’s channels,the good the bad and the ugly ,if you only tell the good it’s doesn’t help others avoid the bad I for one appreciate that
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@freddieconner-ey2xs thanks!
@georgeheller228116 күн бұрын
Grazing more high energy plants will improve animal performance, and take care of the stacking of the manure.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@georgeheller2281 that’s what I’m working on, trying to get through all this stuff first!! lol.
@georgeheller228116 күн бұрын
@drumhillerfarms6858 it would be better for the cattle to skip all the rank lignified forage, and go after the newly recovered lush green forage, then use high density with multiple moves per day to trample the carbon to the ground. Converting solar energy into a marketable product is what grazing is, finding the most efficient way to do that will lead to success.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@georgeheller2281 right on
@WildMeadowsFarm15 күн бұрын
Hey bud. Love your videos. We holistically graze over her in nz. We’ve done just what you’ve done on really wet days. It takes longer to come back but don’t beat yourself up. We now give the cattle more area when heavy rain is coming. Most importantly though apart from this we graze in the end of the blaze of growth stage when the grass is converting the most solar energy into growth. Leave it too long and solar conversion / growth slows. Graze too early and you don’t convert the optimum amount of the suns energy. You have to really monitor grass more closely to achieve this. Looks like where the cattle are going your pastures are left too long. On that paddock you said you overgrazed last time, it looks like you could graze that now before the blaze of growth flattens off. Same deal as you’re doing but looking at grass recovery and basing your rounds on that. Grass recovery and minimising over recovery is really important to convert the maximum amount of the suns energy into grass. How much the cattle eat isn’t so important as you’ve seen on your first muck up
@drumhillerfarms685815 күн бұрын
@@WildMeadowsFarm right on, thanks!
@pabloloza319016 күн бұрын
In two months is the best plot on your farm. You will start thinking on some disturb like this from time to time, in your lees productive patches.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@pabloloza3190 awesome!
@phenyomagaga542316 күн бұрын
Don't stress much it will come back much more denser
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@phenyomagaga5423 thanks! Hopefully!
@springtimeplumbing624016 күн бұрын
I am with everyone else, it will come back, and may surprise you with how good it is. On another topic, where did you find the Murry Gray genetics? Heard good things about their carcass quality.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@springtimeplumbing6240 they are a hard find but I been collecting them wherever I can for years. The farm I took over was raising mirrays
@justinskeans334216 күн бұрын
Thanks for showing this appreciate it. So now will ya role some old hay out on that paddock to get that ground covered up?
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@justinskeans3342 I’m gonna let it go and see what happens
@adammac438116 күн бұрын
I really like murray grey cattle, great walkers, great doers, can live happily on dry sticks.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@adammac4381 lol. We love them too
@robinsonjohn497516 күн бұрын
Another great video. I don't think it's the quality of the forage that's the problem as much as certain animals need more nutrition. Those South polls are awesome and do really well! Anything else not doing as well on your system should be culled. Eventually you'll have an entire herd that thrives on your system. I can't recall if you use minerals in addition to your forage. I'd try using free-choice minerals if you aren't already.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@robinsonjohn4975 I do use minerals I tried the free choice and didn’t have very good success on my farm. Long story short
@GREENCOLLARHOMESTEAD-xl3up15 күн бұрын
Hey not sure the temperature there right now. I would made the same move especially if it was hot out the tall grass helps keep them cool
@drumhillerfarms685815 күн бұрын
@@GREENCOLLARHOMESTEAD-xl3up it’s pretty hot
@LtColDaddy7116 күн бұрын
Mimicking nature is the philosophy, not any particular brand of grazing. Sure, we all make adjustments and fine tune things, but nature is chaos. Enough unintended consequences will always come up, there is going to be chaos.
@drumhillerfarms685815 күн бұрын
@@LtColDaddy71 that’s right
@brettpayton628616 күн бұрын
I learned this the other day with only 5 head of cows. No rain in Forcast but got 4" pop up over night. It was a ugly mess, but we where on bottom side of a hill also. In regards to your stacking up.... I get your none selective, but give them another 10 paces wide from what your normally doing to allow for a little more selective. I would do this with the sheep when I had them to hopefully allow them to get more of what they need. If I pushed em to hard their condition would show an they would graze way more then I wanted. Last thing... do you got more hair on your chin then your head 😂😂 seems that where most of mine grows also lol
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@brettpayton6286 lol thanks, right on!
@user-kv2pt4lu9y16 күн бұрын
Just be sure to rest it til it is completely recovered.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@user-kv2pt4lu9y always!!
@audreysuter431516 күн бұрын
Have you reached out to the carnivore community in your area? We need to get grassfed beef from our farmers❤
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@audreysuter4315 we sell a lot of meat every year off our website
@StoneyRidgeFarmer16 күн бұрын
shew! Man....that's a mess....get some seed on that ...make lemonade...seed it, run the cows on it for a few hours to "hoof" it in....nail it with seed! You might have an opportunity here
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@StoneyRidgeFarmer it’s already bouncing back!
@willienelson207815 күн бұрын
@@drumhillerfarms6858 Seeds were also my first thought, buckwheat, turnip, radish, more grasses or clovers. Lots of options, that pugging is probably the biggest concern but it all is just another data point.
@petereldracher566015 күн бұрын
Seeds are already there and those roots will hold up too.
@drumhillerfarms685815 күн бұрын
@@petereldracher5660 🙏
@masonbaylorbears15 күн бұрын
Im assuming you meant grazed it down too far or too severely? Not overgrazed because you didnt stay on it to graze any regrowth.
@drumhillerfarms685815 күн бұрын
@@masonbaylorbears true!
@masonbaylorbears15 күн бұрын
@drumhillerfarms6858 also didn't look bad at all! If anything the regrowth looked better than the next paddock. The pugged up spot may have some interesting plants grow back but it's all good just non selectively graze those plants also. My cows seem to rarely get majority green grass or really grass at all so you'll be surprised what a cow will eat that isn't the normal grasses
@brentingvardsen194616 күн бұрын
Give it 30-45 days and you will be re-grazing that same spot.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@brentingvardsen1946 hopefully!
@bradharris250316 күн бұрын
Nah. It'll bounce back. Dont sqeat the small stuff. Just get them off of it entirely. This is the most forgiving type of grazing ive tried.
@drumhillerfarms685816 күн бұрын
@@bradharris2503 it’s already starting to come back a little