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Regenerative Agriculture and Direct Drilling
Holistic Farming
"Improving Our Lot" - Planned Holistic Grazing, for starters..
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<blockquote data-quote="som farmer" data-source="post: 7431638" data-attributes="member: 86168"><p>lessons from the past, hold key to soil health</p><p>multicut silage, using rotational grazing methods to get best results.</p><p>need a different approach to soil health, driving a wrecking ball through it, with chemicals, fert and diesel.</p><p>regen ag, receive, retain and release principles</p><p>we need to re-learn our forefathers way's in managing soil, as chemicals no longer working as before.</p><p>improving soil health is the answer to maximising milk, from high quality forage.</p><p></p><p> Not exactly what i expected to see, opening my 'grassland &silage toolkit' magazine this morning, quite a lot more, on the same lines, it does show that perhaps we don't spout a load of bullsh1t on this thread, does that mean we are the front runners, in another ag revolution ?</p><p> Not sure about being a front runner, but it is nice to know, that what we discuss on here, is slowly changing from 'cranky' to more main stream. Having had a good browse through the mag, which arrived with feb dairy farmer, it is full of good ideas, sensibly put, and must have landed on 1,000's of farmers doorsteps.</p><p> For us, cows have just started calving, so we are fast approaching the grazing season, if it dries out, and i can say, i'm really looking forward to it, and trying out some more ideas, some will work, others won't, but it definitely be the same old system. The old saying 'February fill dyke', certainly looks true, we have water bubbling up everywhere, so hopefully a good growing summer, the sun and warm wind are altering things rapidly, daffs, s/drops, buddlea out in leaf, in our garden, elders showing new leaf, all good pointers for an earlier spring, as long as we don't get easterly winds.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="som farmer, post: 7431638, member: 86168"] lessons from the past, hold key to soil health multicut silage, using rotational grazing methods to get best results. need a different approach to soil health, driving a wrecking ball through it, with chemicals, fert and diesel. regen ag, receive, retain and release principles we need to re-learn our forefathers way's in managing soil, as chemicals no longer working as before. improving soil health is the answer to maximising milk, from high quality forage. Not exactly what i expected to see, opening my 'grassland &silage toolkit' magazine this morning, quite a lot more, on the same lines, it does show that perhaps we don't spout a load of bullsh1t on this thread, does that mean we are the front runners, in another ag revolution ? Not sure about being a front runner, but it is nice to know, that what we discuss on here, is slowly changing from 'cranky' to more main stream. Having had a good browse through the mag, which arrived with feb dairy farmer, it is full of good ideas, sensibly put, and must have landed on 1,000's of farmers doorsteps. For us, cows have just started calving, so we are fast approaching the grazing season, if it dries out, and i can say, i'm really looking forward to it, and trying out some more ideas, some will work, others won't, but it definitely be the same old system. The old saying 'February fill dyke', certainly looks true, we have water bubbling up everywhere, so hopefully a good growing summer, the sun and warm wind are altering things rapidly, daffs, s/drops, buddlea out in leaf, in our garden, elders showing new leaf, all good pointers for an earlier spring, as long as we don't get easterly winds. [/QUOTE]
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"Improving Our Lot" - Planned Holistic Grazing, for starters..
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