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Livestock
Livestock & Forage
Reciprocal grazing arrangements
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<blockquote data-quote="Kiwi Pete" data-source="post: 7648293" data-attributes="member: 63856"><p>Yes, at the same time of year that might work out roughly equivalent. </p><p></p><p>The way I look at it with our grazing business, not having sheep on over winter will give us a whole lot more carrying capacity in spring and summer, eg from 4.5hd/ha to around 6- 6.2 in the spring</p><p></p><p>with sheep on, we'd be back a lot in spring and even further back in summer</p><p></p><p>But that's in our context as graziers, which is a bit different, eg whatever makes the most $$$ per kg of feed down the throat, not f**king about with someone's sheep over winter is a winner... the real point is that the OP and neighbour both have a deal they're happy with, without trying to compare concrete mixers to confetti</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kiwi Pete, post: 7648293, member: 63856"] Yes, at the same time of year that might work out roughly equivalent. The way I look at it with our grazing business, not having sheep on over winter will give us a whole lot more carrying capacity in spring and summer, eg from 4.5hd/ha to around 6- 6.2 in the spring with sheep on, we'd be back a lot in spring and even further back in summer But that's in our context as graziers, which is a bit different, eg whatever makes the most $$$ per kg of feed down the throat, not f**king about with someone's sheep over winter is a winner... the real point is that the OP and neighbour both have a deal they're happy with, without trying to compare concrete mixers to confetti [/QUOTE]
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Reciprocal grazing arrangements
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