Mushrooms, oats, grass and a hungry retriever

There are a lot of mushrooms in our fields. The locals call these rosé des prés, which usually means the regular old field mushrooms but there are at least two distinct species that I see. The ones below are in a fairy ring several meters across and I think they are horse mushrooms. They areContinueContinue reading “Mushrooms, oats, grass and a hungry retriever”

Farming links with a focus on cattle yards

Australians don’t say corral, they say cattle yards. And when you link Australia and a Bud Box you get this example of loading cattle onto a truck from Grahame Rees where they cram themselves in. He calls it a Bud Pen instead of a Bud Box. Low-stress stockmanship also made it onto the Landline showContinueContinue reading “Farming links with a focus on cattle yards”

Farm links with an emphasis on cattle pens

I am jealous of Zephyr Hill’s headgate. Matron of Husbandry looking at her year of rotational grazing. I really like her posts on grazing on her farm. We’re designing a very simple pen system (with a chute and a headgate) and the best of the documents we have looked at is this one on low-stressContinueContinue reading “Farm links with an emphasis on cattle pens”

Fall growth started with legumes

Summer here is hot and dry and there are not many plants that grow in those conditions. Lucerne was the legume that kept growing throughout the summer providing fresh fodder for our herd. There were also some grasses that did well relative to the rest, notably the chiendent (couch grass) and yellow foxtail. Each ofContinueContinue reading “Fall growth started with legumes”

Some well-fed heifers on our farm

We have two cow breeds on the farm: a herd of Salers and five Mirandaise heifers. These cow breeds have some differences. Mirandaise are plains cows that like the hot sun and grow large and strong to work the ground under the vines, whereas Salers are mountain cows that give a fair amount of milkContinueContinue reading “Some well-fed heifers on our farm”