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Livestock
Livestock & Forage
Rotational grazing
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<blockquote data-quote="Global ovine" data-source="post: 7466514" data-attributes="member: 493"><p>[USER=120624]@Collie21[/USER] </p><p>Suggest you run your cattle and ewes together over the main pasture growing season. Therefore you can be a little more relaxed on entry heights and take them to 15cms as the cattle will sort it. </p><p>In the autumn you may wish to separate the lambs, as they will do best on pasture regrowth between a maximum entry of 10cms grazed down to 7cms. But the more you split mobs and species the more complicated grazing management becomes. There are many farmers very successfully grazing mixed animal species achieving both more pasture production and animal performance by keeping it simple. Breaking up mono-culture does wonders for animal health and pasture composition.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Global ovine, post: 7466514, member: 493"] [USER=120624]@Collie21[/USER] Suggest you run your cattle and ewes together over the main pasture growing season. Therefore you can be a little more relaxed on entry heights and take them to 15cms as the cattle will sort it. In the autumn you may wish to separate the lambs, as they will do best on pasture regrowth between a maximum entry of 10cms grazed down to 7cms. But the more you split mobs and species the more complicated grazing management becomes. There are many farmers very successfully grazing mixed animal species achieving both more pasture production and animal performance by keeping it simple. Breaking up mono-culture does wonders for animal health and pasture composition. [/QUOTE]
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