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Northern Ireland Milk Price Tracker

Mowed first cut on the 14th of may last year looking like it could be 24th or start of june this year and looks like there will be no more bulk really. In my opinion the guys who went early made the right call.
 

Whitewalker

Member
I think you've missed the frost completely. I started my second round 2 weeks past and still barely justify a fencer. Cows eating brown grass today and left 3 acres like a bowling green just like every day since turnout.
We certainly didn’t miss it completely but maybe got the mild end of the wedge. Plenty of cold cutting wind . We had 50 days before second round and also didn’t shave the ground so probably giving the soil a layer of protection from that chill . Grass isn’t plentiful but enough there to not have to ration it . Surely there must be some heat soon . The rain helped but heat is the key now.
 

The Agrarian

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Northern Ireland
How come when it comes to the slurry ban we all howl you can’t farm by dates but with silage cutting it has to be in for a certain time😂

Give or take a week, we honestly don't tend to see a huge variation in 1st cut quantity from one year to the next. What we have on the 1st or the 7th or the 14th or the 21st of May in any one year isn't that far from average on those dates, across a range of sites. I expect it's probably because everything bunches up closer together in May because of the high growth rates. Grass that's three weeks behind average on the 1st April is never three weeks behind on the 14th May. It might only be days off average. I don't see this year as any exception to that either.
 
Give or take a week, we honestly don't tend to see a huge variation in 1st cut quantity from one year to the next. What we have on the 1st or the 7th or the 14th or the 21st of May in any one year isn't that far from average on those dates, across a range of sites. I expect it's probably because everything bunches up closer together in May because of the high growth rates. Grass that's three weeks behind average on the 1st April is never three weeks behind on the 14th May. It might only be days off average. I don't see this year as any exception to that either.

In general I would
Give or take a week, we honestly don't tend to see a huge variation in 1st cut quantity from one year to the next. What we have on the 1st or the 7th or the 14th or the 21st of May in any one year isn't that far from average on those dates, across a range of sites. I expect it's probably because everything bunches up closer together in May because of the high growth rates. Grass that's three weeks behind average on the 1st April is never three weeks behind on the 14th May. It might only be days off average. I don't see this year as any exception to that either.

I would have less bulk overall than last year tho I thot it would be the case in most areas.
 

The Agrarian

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Northern Ireland
Lots won't agree with me on that. It's just what I see.

The other possibility is that there might be more out there than you are giving it credit for. I tend to underestimate silage yield more often than I get it right.
 

Davy

Member
Location
North NI
This is the thin edge of the wedge. We had a glimmer of the future last year before the union got a stop put to that SES crowd who were basically going to draw a line through all new farm development. Restrictions on stock members, increased measures on emissions, they are already putting a levy on the green diesel in the south, that'll appear here. None of that screams increased return to me. Maybe I'm too cynical...
 

Stuart1

Member
I like the protected urea, cost per unit of n should be similar or slightly less than CAN. Stays in the ground in wet/dry/cold conditions. Sales guys say the nitrogen is in the ground not the grass, so not the same worry over making silage high in ammonia.
I sowed CAN middle of March, was for mowing last week with the two good days we had here but got grass tested and it still had too much nitrogen in it. Would Urea prevent that?
 

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Webinar: Expanded Sustainable Farming Incentive offer 2024 -26th Sept

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On Thursday 26th September, we’re holding a webinar for farmers to go through the guidance, actions and detail for the expanded Sustainable Farming Incentive (SFI) offer. This was planned for end of May, but had to be delayed due to the general election. We apologise about that.

Farming and Countryside Programme Director, Janet Hughes will be joined by policy leads working on SFI, and colleagues from the Rural Payment Agency and Catchment Sensitive Farming.

This webinar will be...
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