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Is Your Farm Ready For Winter’s Worst?

From CASE IH Blog 
 
If winter hasn’t found its way to your farm yet, you likely know all too well that it’s only a matter of time. And if you haven’t had the chance to prepare for winter’s worst, here are some important considerations.
 
Livestock care
 
When you raise livestock, you put the care of your animals above your own needs. The better you prepare, the more easily and more effectively you can meet the needs of your livestock so you can focus on other aspects of your farm. Extension dairy specialists at South Dakota State University offer several winter readiness tips, regardless of species. Nutritional requirements can increase significantly during cold weather. Those requirements rise dramatically if animals become wet and grow even more if there is appreciable wind.1
 
Once acclimated to cold temperature, horses often prefer to be, and are better off, outdoors. During winter months, horses should be given warmed water (45 F to 65 F) and fed additional hay during extreme cold. Access to shelter, regular hoof care and body condition assessments also are important.2
 
Tractor safety
 
Keeping your livestock fed and comfortable can be especially challenging during winter. Snow, ice and cold make operating a tractor more difficult.3 Using your front-end loader to carry heavy loads of snow or hay requires considerably more caution in winter conditions. As North Dakota State University specialists note, slippery conditions increase the hazard of maneuvering elevated loads. It’s important to keep the load and speed low where traction is poor. Properly ballasting the tractor with the use of a front-end loader is important in any season, but especially during winter.
 
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Trending Video

Making budget friendly pig feed on a small livestock farm

Video: Making budget friendly pig feed on a small livestock farm

I am going to show you how we save our farm money by making our own pig feed. It's the same process as making our cattle feed just with a slight adjustment to our grinder/ mixer that makes all the difference. We buy all the feed stuff required to make the total mix feed. Run each through the mixer and at the end of the process we have a product that can be consumed by our pigs.

I am the 2nd generation to live on this property after my parents purchased it in 1978. As a child my father hobby farmed pigs for a couple years and ran a vegetable garden. But we were not a farm by any stretch of the imagination. There were however many family dairy farms surrounding us. So naturally I was hooked with farming since I saw my first tractor. As time went on, I worked for a couple of these farms and that only fueled my love of agriculture. In 2019 I was able to move back home as my parents were ready to downsize and I was ready to try my hand at farming. Stacy and logan share the same love of farming as I do. Stacy growing up on her family's dairy farm and logans exposure of farming/tractors at a very young age. We all share this same passion to grow a quality/healthy product to share with our community. Join us on this journey and see where the farm life takes us.