Got to have water to grow stuff!we havent had any.And i do grow stuff normally,99% of this place is in native pasture that grows beef.But there again if they cant eat they will starve.No rain = No grass,and you cant graze it down to the bare dirt,or it will take fifty years to come back.Its not going to waste,in any shape or form,it being managed the best way i know how.Thats simply to hold off grazing until the grass can stand it again without putting the grass under even more stress where it cant recover at all.Kind of a primitive way in todays thinking maybe,probably could drill some irrigation wells,plow it up and make more money.But its kind of nice knowing you can still walk accross it and see the buffalo wallows from 200 years ago,show your grandkids and great grandkids the difference in the native buffalo grass and the improved pastures folks like so much today.Showing them how you can take a five gallon bucket of water and pour on it and it will be solid green tommorrow while those improved pastures you water all summer still die back. And its kind of nice to know you and your family has not hurt he old place much in the last hundred years. Its not being wasted i ASSURE you. Its money in the bank,drawing intrest on every blade of grass that survives,that will be beef later.hopefully for another hundred years.
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Today's Featured Article - Harvestin Hay: The Early Years (Part 2) - by Pat Browning. The summer of 1950 was the start of a new era in farming for our family. I was thirteen, and Kathy (my oldest sister) was seven. At this age, I believed tractor farming was the only way, hot stuff -- and given a chance I probably would have used the tractor, Dad's first, a 1936 Model "A" John Deere, to go bring in the cows! And I think Dad was ready for some automation too. And so it was that we acquired a good, used J. I. Case, wire tie hay baler. In addition to a person to drive th
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