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Friday, April 11, 2014 |
Early to Stewarts house to feed his stock….fed and watered everybody….came back and caught the horses for the farrier…she was here on time and we trimmed Star Baby and Perkins….both had signs of an abcess….Star Baby was gimpy a couple of days a few weeks ago but I had not seen Perkins take a bad step….Then off to the feed store…got a half dozen early girls and four pacman brocolli…Brad said I could have some pallets so I made another trip for pallets and got four….came home by woodman hall road and found a Rototiller for sale…stopped and made a deal on it….then had to go to the bank for the money from savings account. Got the tiller and brought it home…set up two more pallet gardens and filled with soil and compost….By then it was time to feed the stock….fed had supper and then planted the tomatoes…and the brocolli….none of that in the pallet garden… |
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Saturday, April 12, 2014 |
productive day….set up four more grazing paddocks in the ell for the horses…opened a new paddock for the horses…opened a new paddock for the bulls….cut the grass around the trailer and the dog graves….let the horses graze the lot by the barn….then in the afternoon mowed that one as well. roto tilled where I had the bean bales last year…had to make some repairs to the raised bed….went and got more filter fabric and a sheet of plastic…put plastic over the raised bed and prepped for peppers. finished two more pallets for the pallet garden….found some baling twine on the tiller from the bean bales…cut that off….chores and in for supper….if I have the energy after supper I may try to plant some stuff in the pallet garden….but I am near wiped out…. |
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Sunday, April 13, 2014 |
not as productive as yesterday but still got a lot done….breakfast at Dennys….stop by food lion for some stuff….put together supper in the crock pot….outside…planted butter bean and green beans in the pallet garden…planted some more lettuce as the first is showing signs of coming up….laid out for six more tomato plant sites….put wooden strips down on the plastic where we will plant the peppers….fired up the rotor tiller and tilled two rows….it was difficult to know I was killing some soil but satisfying to see the change in the soil from ten years of no till and adding organic matter….took a picture of it but not yet downloaded….I decided to strip till rather than use herbicides…..I am going to plant corn and pole beans in the same rows and also going to plant some sugar beets and carrots…..going to sow each tilled row to clover as soon as the veggies are planted…..interrows will be mowed with the mower as usual….Allison Joy brough her son Charlie over to see the goats….Charlie will be six in October and was born the same week My friend and neighbor Jack died….fixed the stable gate….worked on the riding mower to get it started….desperately needs a new air filter…chores…supper…crock pot buffalo chicken over egg noodles with a salad was good….hot bath and as soon as I type this off to the sofa and the idiot box…. |
Author Archives: pdfangus
Spring 2014 cover crops post 1.
I was scheduled to plant the first plot fo my spring planted early cover crops this past weekend (2/15/2014)….
My ambition is to plant a paddock every two weeks and monitor response…and photograph and post results here…..
But all the paddocks were covered or mostly covered with a hard crusted snow…..
since I had little interest in feeding the birds expensive seed and the ground under the snow was too wet to get to with the tractor…..
I have postponed the initial planting until next weekend…..we are supposed ot have warm weather this week but still have chances of precipitation…..My whole place is a quagmire and my gray horse is the same color as my brown horse.
scenes and comment for a snowy weekend
As always you can click on any thumbnail to see a larger photo….use your browser back button to return to the blog.
I just took a couple of photos of things the other morning when the dogs and I first went outside to feed hay and water stock and get some firewood.
this first one is simply the young dogs and their daily run/wrassle…..the snow would hold then today so Dee Dee was fine with running in it….this was the wrassling part….they will wrassle a while and then they will run a while
this was the running phase….gosh I wish I had some of that energy….
below is a shot of the paddock that has been the sacrifice lot for Pete and the brush abatement crew….when weather is bad I hang hay in the stable…but if the ground is not rotten or the weather falling I put the hay outside on the ground…..between the hay and the poop piles the lot has been pretty well covered…..my plans for this lot….as soon as there is somewhere else for them to go I am going to shut it off and see what happens….I had spread some clover and cover crop seed in late fall and there is a world of grass seed from the hay….lots of organic matter….the donkeys created a poop spot years ago and I know I will have some dock come up there as it has been there for a couple of years now….good job for the brush abatement crew when they come back to it…

this is the same paddock viewed from the other end….naturally these photos were taken just before the snow.
below is just a shot of the house from the area of the barn and stable….I had taken the tractor and broken a tract to get out to the road….
Pete heard me about and he came out to make sure I was not throwing away any treats….He was running and bucking and playin in the snow today….
Perkins has claimed this spot in the barn….he is looking over the headlocks as this is the area where I use to feed the heifers daily….Perkins thinks it makes good equine accomodations.
And this is where miss Star Baby spends most of her time….she likes to see out and the roof gives her some protection….if the wind gets up she will back into the barn but you can usually see her head….

today has not been cold but the wind has been fierce and everything is so muddy that not much can be accomplished so I am reduced to typing and playing with pictures….
cover crops update mid Feb 2014
12 February 2014
COVER CROP OBSERVATIONS AND THOUGHTS
Several folks have commented on the lack of cover crop postings on my blog lately…there are reasons for this other than my being trifling….
There is not much to report…..
Part of this was expected……when we went into this project last year most folks in an effort to get a good early stand planted the cover crop behind corn……That was great for last year. But this year it meant that a lot of cover crop was behind beans and late…this was not a good year to plant late cover….
A lot of the paddocks sown at my house after say the 20th of October still have not shown me anything….nothing planted at my house after the 1st of November has shown me anything….
Photo below.

My best field which had was planted memorial day and had great cover on it is now just a brown biomass. There are possibly some Rape plants which are not dead. I am pretty sure the crimson clover is okay and just not visible because of the biomass. I think a few winter peas still survive….but everything else appears to have winter killed….even the winter oats…the mustard that was so pretty in the fall is a few scraggly frosted stems where it bolted. The radishes are nearly decomposed..photo be;owere is a picture from Eastview. Taken the end of October. I talked to F.C. this week and he says it is just a brown dead looking patch right now….
Below is a photo taken of Howard Smiths official test plot also taken on Halloween. I have not been back to look at it since the cold weather….

Below are some cover crop plots at the Orange Research station. In the foreground were the early planted and in the background were the same plots planted after October 25th. It was not a good year to plant late cover crops…..

Below Rye….seeded mid September and amended with dairy manure…..a very good cover….

Below Rye seeded mid November after beans with no amendments

Summer Cover Crops
We are in the process of soliciting orders for summer cover crop seed…..We have a few producers who can and do plant summer cover crops as part of the project. We also have a few other producers who have requested to buy seed who are not a part of the project.
This summer we are going to buy Kings Agriseed and they will blend and bag and label the mix for us….
The tentative mix is below….tentative because we may have to adjust the mix to get the needed volume to balance. It will be a pretty complex mix with a lot of diversity.
species
PEARL MILLETT
COWPEAS
BUCKWHEAT
DWARF BMR SORGHUM
3 WAY CLOVER
BROADCASTER
ANNUAL RYEGRASS
SUNFLOWERS
for more information or to order….contact Jim Tate at
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pdfangus@gmail.com
or
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jftate@hanovercounty.gov

Above…..Keenbell Farm daily move while grazing summer cover….10 acres cover. Stocked at 70 animal units per acre per day grazed in July and again in September. 1400 animal unit grazing days on 10 acres….steers gaining upwards of 3.5 lbs per day. They are planting thirty plus acres this year.
COVER CROP OBSERVATIONS…….. by Tate and in no particular order than as they come to me…..each is probably a great topic for extensive debate and discussion.
Remember the great quote from Henry Ford…..”Whether you think you can or you can’t, you are right.”
What you plant needs to be influenced mostly by what you are trying to accomplish. Different species of covers have different attributes.
The best nitrogen fixation and biomass cover is generally considered by grain producers to be a weed but it is Vetch and I love Lana Wolly Pod Vetch.
Next best nitrogen fixer is Crimson clover.
Early planted covers do the most good in soil protection and micro biota feeding.
Tillage kills life in the soil….Gabe Brown from North Dakota does not even use row markers because it is too much tillage for him….he told me that himself…..
I know most guys want to be planting corn as soon as possible….but waiting for the cover crop to achieve some biomass and putting the biomass in contact with the soil is invaluable.
Adding livestock to the rotation is very valuable in soil building and enhances the process….cattle prices are good and are expected to hold for a few years as the national herd is at historic low levels….I have improved my pastures simply by implementing a program of managed grazing….and quit buying lime and fertilizer….over five years ago….
Rye grass and Tillage Radishes and perhaps a few other crops are going to be on the Virginia approved cover crop species list in the new cost share year…..
The benefit of a tillage radish is not the large radish everyone wants to show off….the large radish is simply a nitrogen sink showing how much nitrogen is in the soil after the cash crop….the benefit of the radish is the long tap root that penetrates deep into the soil….as well as the ground covering large leaf biomass that winterkills.
Mixtures are good but they do not have to be as complex as I have made them…..a grass, a legume and a brassica will go a long way….
We need to find ways to get cover crops planted in beans earlier and more effectively….this includes finding species that will work….if you have ideas …..call me we are looking for innovators….
Small fine seed work pretty well for broadcasting
Larger seed work well for feeding birds and indigenous livestock when broadcasting.
Buckwheat will come up where it touches the soil….
Sumer cover crops produce much more biomass and will build soil more quickly.
Summer cover crops work very well in managed grazing.
Summer cover crops when grazed still put incredible amounts of biomass on the soil.
Fall 2012 late planted covers still did well in the spring…..mostly because the spring was so wet that corn could not be planted early…..I hope that some producers recognized the value of letting the cover crops go for a while…..but I realize that corn planting fever burns hot
Cover crops have become a hot commodity with the seed vendors….there are now cover crop vendors everywhere….some are calling me now….two years ago they would not return my call. Producer demand has driven this
I still think that corn no till seeded directly into legume stands with the legumes still living has great potential….research has been published using bluegrass and white clover.
Cover crops are great for wildlife and great for pollinators as well….cover crops need to be a part of buffers, and cropping rotations and farmscaping…
And finally……the Hanover Caroline Soil and Water Conservation District is now the proud administrative body for the 15 foot cover crop roller previously housed at the Three Rivers District. It is available for use by anyone wanting to give crop rolling a try. We are probably going to house it in Western Hanover with a producer who seriously wants to use it regularly….there is no fee to use it….just call us here at the district to discuss use and transport. It is on a dedicated Donahue transport trailer. But for liability reasons probably either the district or NRCS will transport the unit. Photos below.

Starting 2014 out right
My people always told me to do something you liked on New Years day because you would be doing it all year….Last year I missed the new years day ride and low and behold……I only rode five or six times in all of 2013……
Determined not to repeat that pattern I was going to ride today even if was just a few laps around the house….
It was much better than that……We went to the annual PPRC New Years day ride at Lake Anna and had a ball….
I went with Stewart and in fact was priviledged to ride his nice his nice Rocky Mule, Dancehall Dixi….
Stewart and I had not ridden since mid summer….and Dixi had not been out in longer than that…But she was just like I had ridden her yesterday….well mannered and a joy to ride…
The deer were numerous and today we were riding right up to them…..must have seen a dozen and rode withing thirty feet of one….Dixi and I were both watching her and waiting for her to move, yet she stood stock still. When she did move it was so sudden that it still caused a little jump.
The weather was grand….started out cold as the devil but when the sun came out it warmed up nicely and the fierce wind of yesterday had laid down today….with all the rain of the last month the trails were a little sloppy but Stewart and I are seldom in a hurry…..We rode a total of 6.75 miles and got back in time for the nice pot luck lunch. Dixi breathed a great sigh of relief when I finally stepped down off of her….
while I did not get photos of them there were at least four other mules there today….One was David Oates on his nice mule and there were three more in a group that was not with us…..Peerkins would have enjoyed that as he always likes mules.
random photos below without narrative….
PDF COVER CROPS IN MID OCTOBER 2013
As most of you would know by now I do a lot of rotational grazing….
On my small place we have three grazing groups.
first there are the equines….Star Baby, Palladin Perkins and the two mini donks Jonah and Esther. They pretty much have the front of the place. Then there are a couple of cows and heifers and they have the back. This year we have two young bulls and they have a corner in the back…
It has become my routine since last fall to sow whatever paddock was grazed during the week to some sort of cover on the weekend after grazing….during the late spring and summer I put out a good bit of summer cover and since late august or early september I have been sowing fall type stuff…
This weekend I sowed three paddocks. One for the horses and two for the cattle….
Below is the paddock I sowed which the horses had grazed. This was a paddock that I put a summer mix on late in the summer….I had to go ahead and graze it as the weather forecast is calling for frost this week and with these summer grasses the feed value is lost after frost, plus the danger of prussic acid poisoning after frost….so I let tthe horses have them mid week and sowed and mowed on saturday….this field I broadcast Rye, Winter Peas, Crimson Clover and some Ashland Pasture mix. then I mowed it and as I mowed dragged an automobile tire over it to scatter piles….
Equines grazed just before the frost[/caption]]
In the cattle area I sowed two adjoining strips which had been grazed. this was the last cattle grazing in the strips for a while….
On Saturday My last cow to calve was in what I thought was early stage labor when I went outside…Walking and bawling with her tail stuck out a little…this is a mature cow and so I went about my business thinking she was fine….In fact I went up front to sow the horse paddock. when I came back the cow was lying down straining but not doing much…actually only saw her strain once and she got up and walked off….this is not uncommon behavior for some cows….
So the dogs and I went in and had lunch. When I came back out the cow still had made no progress…now I was worried….I gathered my obstetrical supplies and then went and walked the cow up to the barn….I gloved up and went in rectally and my worst fear was confirmed….calf was coming backwards and butt first…..it takes and exceptional cow to be able to get one out in this presentation without assistance. I had one cow do it once but it took a lot out of her….
so I regloved and went in on a fishing expedition for feet….I could tell early on that the calf was not moving and was probably already dead….I got hold of the left foot and pulled it up pretty easily…the right one took a while…the arthritis in my right hand was an added bonus that slowed things further….but it was the right hand that finally grabbed the foot and got it started up and out. Then I applied the calving chains and the delivery was pretty easy….
but the nice heifer calf was expired….I tried all my tricks at resucitation but there was no heart beat and no breathing….
So we had a fifty percent calf crop this year.
Later I saw my neighbor and he is awash in grass and he invited me to put my cows out with his….Not having to be on maternity watch any more I took him up on his offer and let my herd and his red heifer out with his cows….
Back to cover crops…..
below is a photo of what has become my all star cover crop plot….this is the plot I sowed on Labor Day week end. The tall stuff is a combination of new seedlings and regrowth from the millet and sorghum sudan that was grazed and mown before new seeding. The frost predicted this week will add it to the biomass for the field.
A closer look shows that the summer cover is not dominant….the rape and radishes and forage mustard are thick and growthy….this is the salad which I picked and Marie cooked last week end.
It will be interesting to watch the phases of this years cover crops….certainly these three are dominant now and the small grains and crimson clover have to be searched for in this field….
I have sown a good bit of winter oats in paddocks this fall….I am liking them…they come up easily and well and are growing at a rapid rate….
This paddock was a horse paddock that was grazed and sown about three or four weeks ago…..It had a lot of grass residue at the time….part bermuda and part orchardgrass…oats and crimson clover are what was sown…I sowed rye this weekend but think I will try to find another bag of winter oats…will probably have to order them….hard to find around here.
here is a fairly good view of some of the cover crop paddock in the horse area as seen from the road. so of these have been challenged as the brush abatement crew seems to have an appreciation for them….with single wire fences for the horses the brush abatement crew is confined only by the perimeter fences….I am not complaining as the last brush abatemetn crew refused to be confined at all….this crew is actually performing their desired function….they for the most part stay close to the equines and they certainly are beginning to make a mark on the brush and sspplings that have become numerous…just yesterday the horses were grazing and the goats were on their hind feet harvesting sweet gum leaves….I am in a project of cleaning up the fences and am hopefully that the brush abatement crew will assist in keeping them clean….the down side is that they are the reason the cover crops on the the cattle side are doing better than those on the horse side….
Sunday was a little brighter….Owe that to my pal Perkins…I did some minor repairs on the house in the morning and some other little chores….After lunch I needed to go check on the cow that had the dead calf….instead of doing what I normally do and hopping on the tractor I grabbed Perkins bridle and hopped on him bareback to go check….I have not been on him in months and have not ridden bareback since 2009 when I went and got him….His back is still sharp and his trot is still big but it was actually easier to ride than with a saddle….Of course riding bareback you have to use your legs and not just try to balance in the stirrups….
We rode around the field and then rode up to the cows…the cows wanted to gather around Perkins and my cow that has a calf can be agressive so we had to push em back a little…they quickly gave ground to him…Suprisingly Perkins liked that….He liked working the cows….So we decided to walk them around a little bit and had a training ride….we took the whole herd easily around the field and up the hill to the gate to my place….I really think he enjoyed it…I know I did….then we made a loop around the field and back to the stable…Couple of miles all together….on a beautiful day on a good old horse.
As usual Miss Laid Back and Mr. Intensity are keeping an eye on things….here they take a break from their biathalon of racing and wrestling….
Pete Update
Before the Pete Update I must share this item that appeared on Facebook today….
All I need to know in life I learned from my horse:
When in doubt, run far, far away.
You can never have too many treats.
Passing gas in public is nothing to be ashamed of. …
New shoes are an absolute necessity every 6 weeks.
Ignore cues. They’re just a prompt to do more work.
Everyone loves a good, wet, slobbery kiss.
Never run when you can jog. Never jog when you can walk. And never walk when you can stand still.
Heaven is eating at least 10 hours a day… and then sleeping the rest.
Eat plenty of roughage.
Great legs and a nice rear will get you anywhere. Big, brown eyes help too.
When you want your way, stomp hard on the nearest foot.
In times of crisis, take a poop.
Act dumb when faced with a task you don’t want to do.
Follow the herd. That way, you can’t be singled out to take the blame.
A swift kick in the butt will get anyone’s attention.
Love those who love you back, especially if they have something good to eat.
Any how ……
the last two days Pete has progressed tremendously…..
In part I think it is due to two things….I moved his residence to a lot with some grass and temprorarily drier conditions….the other is the source of the drier conditions which has been the lack of rain in September and early October.
We had a bit over six tenths of an inch of rain yesterday…..
Pete had been walking a bit better with only one foot lately being obviously sore. Since I have moved him to the old cattle maternity lot he has had more grass and as a result has stayed out on the pasture a bit more rather than standing around in the stalls….he is away from the other horses and so he can not stand in the stall next to them….
At any rate he has shown some improvement….Stewart remarks every time he sees him about how well he is gaining weight…..I can tell he is better than when he arrived but seeing and handling him daily I do not notice the gradual changes….His ribs no longer stick out but he still needs more weight on his topline….His butt seems to be getting a little bigger and he has shown more interest in life….He nickers every time he sees my van coming home becuase he knows he is soon to be turned out in the yard and given his daily concentrate ration….
He gets a good bit of beet pulp and a little bit of a lot of other stuff….he basically gets the sme ration as Perkins who gets at least twice as much as Star Baby….Perkins has always been a hard keeper and Star Baby will stay fat on not much of anything.
Pete is also getting a dose of Source daily….
Two days ago when it rained, it had stopped raining when I got home and the grass was still wet. Pete cam to the gate to be turned out and I looked down at his feet and since they were wet……
I could clearly see between 3/4 and an inch of new sound hoof wall growth extending down from his coronary band. It appeared to be bright and solid and strong….and all four feet looked the same.
Julie, my farrier, will look at him again on Friday.
I complemented him on his new growth, and turned him out…..
He amazed me by walking off soundly and heading for the house to see if Marie had any horse cookies…
Later in the evening when I was leading him back to his paddock so that I could open the gates which blocked the driveway, he was walking so fast that I had to step along to keep up with him….I was thrilled to see him walking so well…..
Then last night, when I opend the gate to turn him out into the yard…….
he broke into a trot as soon as he cleared the gate and trotted toward the house and then bucked and farted and ran across the yard…..
He had his tail up on his back and was prancing all around and obviously felt better……
I yelled for Marie to come see but she was in the back of the house and I had to go all the way to the house to make her hear me….I think her hearing is slipping to as she either can not hear me or is totally ignoring me……others often complain about my volume….
Anyhow when she finally showed up with his cookies Pete had calmed down and was grazing in the yard but came right to her for his cookies.
I was so happy for him that i left him in the yard all night and he was out there grazing when I let the dogs out at 4:00 am….
When I went out to go to work he had gone to the barn and was lying down and all I had to do was change the gates….
I am so glad to finally see him feeling better….
MSCC AND FARM DOINGS
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Below is Dee Dee on alert…Dee is the watch dog…she does not miss much….she is pretty much a homebody and like to stay close to her people…she is asleep next to my chair as I type this….Not real big but wiry and fast and getting to be very protective of the place and Marie… She likes to stay close and Apache is the free spirit and the adventurer…Dee is pretty Conservative and cautious….
But all she had to do is sound the alarm and the enforcer is pretty quickly going to show up….He is the Guard dog….If I tell them somone is all right they will accept them quickly….but if I don’t tell them, they snarl and bark enough to keep you in your car….Marie says that during the week, whenever anyone comes to the door that they are very protective….
Pete is the guard horse….He still is not sound enough to deal with the boss mare so I keep him in a little lot near the stable and trun him out when I am home ot graze in the yard….when he sees my van in the evenings now he goes to his gate and nickers….I shut the gate to the highway and open his and he comes out and grazes….he soon makes his way ot the house to see if Marie has any cookies….
Yesterday I was mowing a paddock and looked toward the house to see him standing next to the sidewalk and looking in the front door looking for Marie….I called her and told her to go to the door….he got his cookie and went back to grazing…
I think he is putting on a little weight….He is still pretty lame in the front feet but the back seem to be getting better….Julie says he has so much undermining of the sole from all the abcesses that it is going to take a while for him to come around…
while grazing he has demonstrated a marked preference for the bermuda grass….he grazes the bermuda grass right down to the dirt….then he moves on to the other grasses…we actually have some bluegrass in the back yard and he does go back there and nibble on it sometimes but I think he wants to stay in the front just in case of a cookie spill…
He did manage to find my root boxes….These are boxes that have plexiglass panels so we can look at roots growing throught the soil….this one had a tillage radish and some winter peas growing in it….OOPHS…that one ain’t coming back because he bit the growth point off with the top of the radish….
This rootbox has tillage radish and oats growing in it….
this one I had to reseed…it has barley and crimson clover coming up well now….don’t know why the original seeding did not take….
Thank goodness my cover crop buckets are doing okay….one bucket got a little too much water and the ryegrass has wilted back pretty badly but the others are doing well….I didn’t put drain holes in the buckets because I was hoping to salvage them after the cover crops….
This is a photo of mustard blooming…this is mustard from last years fall mix. we used regular mustard and it is tall and somwhat spindly and is the first victim of the cold weather. This year we used a forage mustard in an effort to get the aleopathic benefits of mustard as well as increase the biomass…now I have to learn to distinguish it from the rape and the radishes,,,
I have mustard blooming in this field with sorghum sudan and millet six feet tall because after grazing the summer cover twice, I broadcast a hodge podge of seed on the paddock…I don’t even remeber how long ago…I have it recorded but do not recall. I do recall that I used a hodge podge of leftover seed of all types including some fall mix from last year and some summer mix…So now I have a very diverse paddock with buckwheat and sorghum sudan and millet as well as radishes and rape and mustard and crimson clover…I don’t see much cereal grain but there is also a lot of pasture grasses in the paddock….everything from fescue to crab grass…
Below is the former bull lot that has become the poster child for cover crops on my place. This is the paddock that I mowed summer cover and reseeded on Labor day weekend….three weeks ago….a lot of the green is still Sorghum Sudan and millet…both regrowth and new seedlings from the old crop…but there is a plethora of the new fall seedlings as well…rape and radishes are very evident and the cereal grain wheat and winter oats are coming up but hard to see yet…The new crimson clover is not yet visible but that is normal and I do not know what phacelia looks like and that is a new species in the mix this year along with the forage mustard. The mustard and radishes both have some aleopathic effects and this year we switched to forage mustard to increase biomass.
This is another shot of the bull pasture that is an attempt to show the radishes and rape among the summer annual grasses….I think next summer I am going to try some dwarf brown mid rib sorghum as the primary summer crop…I really liked what I saw at Blacksotne this summer.
I am also tinkering with the idea of planting the new field to warm season grasses…there might be too much shade there for them but It is a good place to give it a try and it will never work if I don’t plant some….Warm sesaon grasses take a couple of years to get establihed but the field is certainly not very productive now and I have little to loose other than the cost of the seed. Trying to figure out what grassed I want to try…probably Big Bluestem and Indian Grass and maybe one more.
Farrier was here last night….
the foot he is lame on has an active abcess….
all four feet have multiple sole lession scars from previous abcesses….
the field he was in for two years is, at best, a damp field….
Farrier said his feet felt more like bars of soap than hooves….result of the constant wetness he has been in for years.
He just has to grow new hooves all around….going to begin a regimen of spraying soles with iodine and going to start him on a hoof supplement. I don’t know if that will help but it most likely can not hurt.
he is already walking better every day and is now pretty much sound on three feet and the one with the active abcess has opened itself….he has been improving daily since he has been here.
he is learning his new name and nickers loudly in the evenings when it is feeding time…..
I let him out in the yard to feed him to aleviate interference with meals from the brush abatement crew. then I let him graze for a half hour or so…..he has taken to going up to the front door to say howdy to Marie….
he was a perfect gentleman for the farrier and even stood well on the sore foot while she looked at the other three feet…..
Thanks Julie for coming out after hours to look at him….
he gets wormed tonight and will do the others while we are at it. little early for fall worming but going with zimectrin gold this time…..
progress is being made and we are on the road to recovery…..just a matter of time and care…
Labor Day Weekend 2013
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It has been so hot and muggy this Labor day weekend that even the Direct Tee Vee reciever quit working
I quit about lunch time and came in the house to cool off….
had to call Direct Tee Vee because Maries kitchen set was not working….They sent a guy out this afternoon and he has fixed it and gone….the reciever itself had quit working….He replaced that and commented that the connectors looked old and replaced all the connectors on all the cables….and changed out the head on the dish….
I have been cutting grass and sowing new fall cover crops….Took most of the day Saturday just to mow the lawn….It was growing faster that Pete could keep up with it…..Pete has a preference for bermuda
grass…we have a lot of bermuda and crab grass in the lawn and Pete will select the Bermuda…
I have commented before on my rig for sowing cover crops….below is a photo from yesterday…I broadcast the seed and then bush hog the residue and roll it with the aerator….
this is what the field looled like after the cows had been through it….mind you this was just two cows and two heifers…. they disappeared into the jungle and I did not see them until I called them out for their evening handout….I give em just a taste of grain in the evenings to keep them coming to the barn when I call them….really makes life easier particularly in the winter….
This field carried them a bit over two weeks.
the not knocked down stalks were taller than I can reach….this one probably was 18 inches higher than I could reach….the field was covered in them….these millet and sorghum stalks are all that are visibly left. I was at Keenbell this week and in the field that they grazed and the buckwheat and cowpeas and clover and the millet were all regrowing and most was head high on me again….
I decided to go ahead and plant mine to the fall cover crop….
another post grazing shot.
while it look slike they ate it all….there is a good bit of residue on the ground….
here is what it looked like after seeding and rolling. then we had a little shower last night…less than 2/10 of an inch….buty I would rather be lucky than good.
I planted another smaller lot this morning….but I did not mow it…It was a grass lot that was grazed by the horses about a week ago…I broadcast the seed and then ran over it with the aerator roller….
Here is a shot of the variety pack of cover crop buckets that I planted for display at the Virginia State Fair.
all did well except the pure turnips and I replanted that one and it is coming on now….
Even the summer cover crop buckets that were grazed inadvertently by the brush abatement crew are recovering nicely now. they may be fit for display as well….
The obligatory picture of Pete waiting for his evening cookie from Marie….he has figured out that if he hangs around the front poorch sooner or later he will get a cookie….
Apache and Pete….Apache is a little jealous of the attention Marie pays to Pete…but he is a good boy and he and Pete get along well….
Stewart saw Pete on Sunday and says he looks like he is gaining weight….I see him too much and can not see him gaining yet….He is still ouchy on all four feet but he is no longer hopping….I think he might make a nice looking pony some day…..he is still easy to get along with and know his name when there is a treat or feed involved.
























































