1600sq/ft Custom Cattle Feeder
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- Опубликовано: 27 дек 2024
- prairiefarmrepo...
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Features: Gary Garman of Allan, Saskatchewan and his fairly large portable hay feeder that measures 17 feet wide and 96 feet long. It has a wooden sliding gate which is pushed along as the cattle clean up the feed. He feeds about 60 cows each winter and has a custom grinder fill the feeder. It is large enough it only requires to be filled twice each winter. It takes about a day for the grinder to fill the feeder. He estimates the feeder only allows for about 5% waste. It cost him about $3,000 to build and he is able to reuse most components of it every feeding season.
As I'm watching different videos on feeding cattle there are two very different thoughts about hay. Any hay left on the ground and not eaten is either wasted or its good for the pasture. Now this guy is feeding cattle on row crop fields as we do. I use bale rings that way I can move them around over the field to spread out the manure that cows produce. Also there is always a little waste when I move the rings but I don't consider it waste. That so called waste is organic matter that is being added back to the soil. As far as feeding in pastures is concerned I fully believe that rolling the hay out in the best option. Again you spread the manure around and any left behind is good for that pasture. A win win if you ask me.
Greg Judy also rolls out his bales for the same reason you do.
Got-to-love that 2x6 wood construction movable feeders...nicely done!
Genius , that seams to make sense and looks like it will work great
Great information, down here in the Tampa,Florida on Nov.28,2018 it’s about 55 outside. Keep the videos coming.
I'd be wary of using metal (tin) as part of the calf shelter out in the open field but I suppose lightning is highly unlikely during late winter early spring. The two feeders are fantastic ideas though.
It's good to see old fashioned ingenuity still alive and well.
I did similar to this for my 10goats this fall. All I needed was some metal gates. It works.
Pretty neat set up and smart thinking on his part
Wow! what a savings in several ways and completely operational. Genious!
I've fenced off a half section to 3 quarters for swath grazing. Oats and sometimes barley and oats mixed. Cut it as grainfeed and I seen very good results from that. Anywhere from 300 to 600 cows in that swath grazing practice. I never seen any waste.
Cool feeding setup. Thinking out of the box to figure out a system that works for him, I like it.
grassfeeding
Should be narrower and longer as cows can’t reach the centre. That would eliminate a lot of forking the hay in the centre to the sides
Did you even watch the video or do you just not understand?
I'd like to see the plans for the round bale feeders.
Smart guy 👍👍 saves a small fortune over the years.
Lots of ingenuity there.
Would the silage and hay not rot or mould in the air. Because here in Ireland, when I feed my cows any loose silage goes of quickly and has to be fed quickly.
Frozen - winter only.
Here in Saskatchewan it rarely goes above -20 Celsius from early December to March. And the snow acts as an insulator. We have more issues with frozen silage bales then mould or rot. We have a buffalo feedlot in southeast Sask, and we are constantly busting up frozen bales for the buffalo to eat. Then again buffalo don’t eat meat as much in the winter and still gain the most weight then any other time of year.
Don’t eat as much...... hahaha
Steve Slade, I agree there, we have VERY little rain. For the entire 2018 growing season, (late April to early October if you are lucky) we only had about 250mmt of rainfall here in south east Saskatchewan. Im sure you have that In a month in Ireland.
I’m not associated with farming in any way but this is fascinating
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If you eat you're associated with farming. HKM
Very smart setup, all farmers should do the same. thanks for this guy for sharing his idea with others
I like the bale feeder idea but what about a ring feeder?
tarp the top??
Tammi Corbett if you making compost
If it is silage, how do you compact it? And it isnot covered. Doesnt it go bad from rain, snow or oxygen?
It's dry hay, not silage.
The freezing temperatures will slow the decay down. Cows will eat that pile before to much bad things happen. If it was uncovered during the warmer months, that would be different, but he will send his cows out to pasture during that time.
Complimenti bella invenzione.
He's a bit hard to understand but he's inventive and smart so bravo.
really useful system
Excuse me. My english is weak. Is this crop silage or dry?
@Steve Slade thank you.
How do you get less waste with none of the feed covered and all exposed to oxygen?
@Steve Slade And what about when it's raining ?
He will only be doing this during the winter, where it's usually in the freezing temperatures. The snow on top won't melt into the feed unless a really warm day comes along, and by spring, he will send them out to pasture and stop feeding this way.
Also, given the freezing temperatures, breakdown of the feed will be slow if at all
I like the idea but I don’t believe there is no manure to haul. The manure will pile up around the feeder. And he only moves the feeder once to another site.
Smart design. If I were him I'd plant some trees too. Is it cheaper to rent the tub grinder?
60 cows how many days before you got a grind again and how many Bales it takes to fill it up
With his two wheel drive loader is assume hes using 3 by 3 by 8 bales. So hes got to be pushing 130 bales at a time. Figure them at 1000 pounds a piece depending on the feed, and is guess his cows at 1350 pound at 3.5 percent body weight, you'd guess he's going through thay in close to 45 or 50 days. Just assuming fuel use on feeding every day like is traditional to be 25 dollars a day, that's close to 1100 dollars durring the 45 days. Renting a tub grinder ain't that much for one day. Thoughts?
Slash Box Cattle Co. I agree. The tub grinder would be more affective, and more cost efficient. And the price of fuel here would be a lot more then $25/day in my opinion. But I don’t know a lot of ranchers here in sask using 3x3 bales. We usually use 5x5 rounds for silage, and 6x6 rounds for hay and straw (barley, oats and canary straw for ruffage). Then again he is a smaller operation then most around here.
Very good idea.
Молодцы 👍 👍 👍 👍 👍
Если поставить на ролики движущуюся сторону, то коровы будут сами ее толкать и не заваливать ее в стороны.
I like it such a method
Excuse me. What is this meal?
Ali Emira ground hay. Very common feed
Nice job good idea.
why spend more money than you have to? great idea to also free yourself up for awhile till its empty
Like it !!
Feeding that many cows in one area for several weeks really overloads nutrients in that spot. That is poor management he gets away with because each winter he uses a different field. I wonder how he supplies water?
bruh snow is made of water, they eat the snow lmao u dont know much stop casting judgement
Its probably better off in the field where you can drag or harrow it once before planting rather than hauling it out of a corral like he mentioned wouldnt you agree
pm on o
Good idea
Smart guy.
Smart
Like it
nice
عجب کاری به به کاملاً حلال و با آرامش
👍👏🙋♂️🔥🌈
ایده ای جالب هستش
تتفااا
I bet his wife works in town and they live off the money she makes. The farm probably struggles to break even.
Yeah,with 60 cows,as a farmer i wouldn't survive.
It says they have over 1100 acres so he grows crops as well.
Agree 🤐 but true 😶😐
Sell some of your land and fix the things you need to make it easy for you.
Well yes! Behind every good farmer and rancher is a great wife who works in town.
It's ideal if you want to feed your cattle yeast and crap.
There's obviously no issues with it for him. If there was, he would see issues when calving (abortions and death etc).