DH talked to an Extension forage specialist at Purdue about the wheat hay. They decided whether to let it grow and bale it will depend on the stand and how it develops over the next few weeks with warm weather and rain.
If it looks good, one plan would be to bale it in big squares then double crop soybeans after it.
It always seems like we could sell more hay if we had it. This might make more good hay available for sale over the winter.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Note to self ...
Wheat hay:
Pro: Volunteer wheat is already greening up on last year's wheat ground. If we made hay there for the beef cows ... 1. It could free up some of the better hay to sell. 2. Field work on those acres is already done, would save on time and fuel. 3. Would save on seed and fertilizer cost of planned crop.
Con: 1. Will it grow enough to mow and bale? 2. Will the cows eat it (they are not too awful picky ...) 3. What if there is some weird fungus or something that's dangerous for the the cows? 4. Input costs of mowing, raking and baling, twine and labor (We use the smaller tractors for hay, though)
What about wheat pasture ... h'mmm ...
Pro: Volunteer wheat is already greening up on last year's wheat ground. If we made hay there for the beef cows ... 1. It could free up some of the better hay to sell. 2. Field work on those acres is already done, would save on time and fuel. 3. Would save on seed and fertilizer cost of planned crop.
Con: 1. Will it grow enough to mow and bale? 2. Will the cows eat it (they are not too awful picky ...) 3. What if there is some weird fungus or something that's dangerous for the the cows? 4. Input costs of mowing, raking and baling, twine and labor (We use the smaller tractors for hay, though)
What about wheat pasture ... h'mmm ...
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Wait a minute, and it'll change
I last wrote about the joy of going outside with no coat or hat (or various other layers).
Had to get them back out. On Tuesday and Wednesday we had pouring down rain, gusts to 50 miles an hour and then snow again. *sigh*
The winter wheat sown last fall has all germinated and greened up. With the heavy rain and flooding, patches of it were damaged -- or as DH would say, "drowneded out." The price of wheat dropped quite a bit yesterday based on the USDA crop report but seems to have recovered now. We no longer forward-contract it, but still watch the markets and growing conditions in other areas pretty closely. I expect we will soon start reading harvest progress reports from Texas.
Despite all the uproarious weather, my daffodils' buds are plumping up. These are against the east foundation of the house, a sheltered spot with morning sun. Hope to see them soon and very soon.
Had to get them back out. On Tuesday and Wednesday we had pouring down rain, gusts to 50 miles an hour and then snow again. *sigh*
The winter wheat sown last fall has all germinated and greened up. With the heavy rain and flooding, patches of it were damaged -- or as DH would say, "drowneded out." The price of wheat dropped quite a bit yesterday based on the USDA crop report but seems to have recovered now. We no longer forward-contract it, but still watch the markets and growing conditions in other areas pretty closely. I expect we will soon start reading harvest progress reports from Texas.
Despite all the uproarious weather, my daffodils' buds are plumping up. These are against the east foundation of the house, a sheltered spot with morning sun. Hope to see them soon and very soon.
Friday, March 6, 2009
Open the Windows
All I can say is wow. After a long winter of record cold and snowfall, today the sun is out, the sky is a hazy blue and it is 68 degrees outside. I went outside with no jacket or parka, no fur hat, no mittens, no down vest, no wool sweaters and no long johns. Only finding an actual dandelion or two would make it better.
Ah ...
Ah ...
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
A new book ...
Our friend Lisa in Wisconsin sent us a copy of her new book, The Gold Standard, one the Heartsong Presents mystery series. Heartsong is an imprint of Barbour Publishing.
Here's the set-up: "Just how high a price does buried treasure command?"
DH got to it first. Since he reads a few pages at a time, I waited and waited for him to finish it. I thought he'd like it since it was set on a farm in rural Wisconsin.
After he finished, I asked for his impressions.
"It was good and interesting until the very last. Then they arrested --"
"Don't tell me -- I haven't read it yet!"
"Well, then, the last part was all mushy stuff. It was pretty good until then."
So there you have it -- a man's perspective.
Lisa said in an e-mail that the book need to be have a certain percent of romance, just like cattle feed has to have a certain percent of protein. With that perspective, maybe DH will overlook ruining a good story.
Here's a little something about the book: "School teacher Judy Winters sets out to solve the mystery surrounding her Aunt Louise's murder back on the family farm. Amid her sleuthing, Judy encounters Hart Wingate, a young man who rented the adjoining farm and helped Aunt Louise with farm chores. When Judy learns that her boyfriend, Graham, has secretly been visiting Louise, she decides to move away from him for the summer and think over the situation.
"As Judy explores her aunt's house, she finds and follows clues in Louise's mother's diary to unearth buried treasure. But was the treasure behind Louise's murder?"
I'm reading it right now.
Lisa is one of my buds from ACFW, American Christian Fiction Writers. So ... I guess I'm out now as a writer. We became acquainted via the group's e-mail loop. I can't say enough about ACFW's emphasis on encouraging and building up writers at all stages of their career.
As soon as I figure out how, I'll have to add a link to ACFW to the blog.
Here's the set-up: "Just how high a price does buried treasure command?"
DH got to it first. Since he reads a few pages at a time, I waited and waited for him to finish it. I thought he'd like it since it was set on a farm in rural Wisconsin.
After he finished, I asked for his impressions.
"It was good and interesting until the very last. Then they arrested --"
"Don't tell me -- I haven't read it yet!"
"Well, then, the last part was all mushy stuff. It was pretty good until then."
So there you have it -- a man's perspective.
Lisa said in an e-mail that the book need to be have a certain percent of romance, just like cattle feed has to have a certain percent of protein. With that perspective, maybe DH will overlook ruining a good story.
Here's a little something about the book: "School teacher Judy Winters sets out to solve the mystery surrounding her Aunt Louise's murder back on the family farm. Amid her sleuthing, Judy encounters Hart Wingate, a young man who rented the adjoining farm and helped Aunt Louise with farm chores. When Judy learns that her boyfriend, Graham, has secretly been visiting Louise, she decides to move away from him for the summer and think over the situation.
"As Judy explores her aunt's house, she finds and follows clues in Louise's mother's diary to unearth buried treasure. But was the treasure behind Louise's murder?"
I'm reading it right now.
Lisa is one of my buds from ACFW, American Christian Fiction Writers. So ... I guess I'm out now as a writer. We became acquainted via the group's e-mail loop. I can't say enough about ACFW's emphasis on encouraging and building up writers at all stages of their career.
As soon as I figure out how, I'll have to add a link to ACFW to the blog.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)