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Running a year round, all grass system is the objectiveRunning a year-round, all-grass system is the objective of the owners of Acerna Pastures, a 173ha dairy farm near Geraldine in South Canterbury. The property was converted and resown for dairying from mid-2006 to early 2007 for milking to begin last August. Owned by farming partners Alvin and Judith Reid and Milne and Christine Horne, the farm is being managed as an intensive grazing unit following the principles of pasture management practised at the Lincoln University Dairy Farm (LUDF). For this first year of production 260,000-270,000kg of milksolids (MS) has been budgeted for from 710 crossbred cows, run at a stocking rate of 4.3 cows/ha. During winter, the cows are grazed off-farm, returning in late July for calving to begin in August. “There are three distinct areas on the farm which are being managed according to their natural abilities,” Alvin said.
“This land produced a tremendous amount of feed in late spring and the focus is now on building up the organic matter in this area and encouraging more tillering. The dairy effluent is applied to this area to boost organic matter “With pasture growth regularly monitored weekly, and a feed production wedge created, knowing which paddocks are the lowest producers is easy,” said farm manager Rodney Herrick. “Monitoring is the key to maintaining this system and having two centre pivots in operation makes for very effective watering with minimal waste.” Alvin said that when the records show DM production is falling off in particular paddocks it would be a straightforward and objective decision about which ones to renew. Read the full story under Dairy - Data makes decision easy |
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