From sourcing straw to farmer tans, the summer can be a stressful time on Irish farms. Rachel Hussey gives us the lowdown on what to expect from our farmers in the coming months.
1. Will the sun ever come out?
You’ve endured the spring showers and now they don’t seem to be stopping and worse, the drains you put in last summer aren’t working like you thought they would. Disaster. What could possibly fix this? Sun. Nothing like the sun to get the grass growing.
2. Will it ever rain?
Ok, we got the sun but lads, it’s a bit too dry now isn’t it? Nothing like a drop of rain to get the fields to green up eh? We need a balance and Irish weather isn’t helping.
3. When can I spread the fertiliser?
Timing is key. You want to make the most of the possible grass growth but you don’t want your work washed away in the run off from the rain. Stress ensues.
4. “I wonder has Pat over the road started cutting?”
Nothing like the competition between neighbours about who will haul out the silage gear first and you keep an eye out from early May.
5. “What will we make the boys for their supper?”
The lads have been hard at work cutting and packing silage all day and they need to eat. Panic is inevitable. What kind of spread will you put out for them? Will they like a salad? What about some chips? Don’t even start me on those picky eaters – cue mammy shouting, “They’ll eat what’s put in front of them”. One plus though - the house is filled with the fancy biscuits.
6. Picking stones
The weather is fine. The land is dry. When will you get a more ideal time to pick stones than now? No one is quite sure what these stones are used for and the mystery will forever exist.
7. Farmers tan
You’ve been out all summer and your shoulders have been covered but your arms have been bare all season. What else can this mean but the unfortunate farmers tan creeping in? You will spend all summer trying to even this out but I mean why bother? Embrace it.
8. The second cut
The first cut of silage is done and you’ve noticed that you don’t have enough. You’ve decided to set a few paddocks aside and hope that the growth will take off with them. Now to decide when to get it done.
9. Who to get straw from?
The end of summer is fast approaching and you’re not entirely sure how you are going to get some straw to keep the cattle warm over those long winter nights. Time to start researching suppliers in the area.
10. Ploughing Championship
Nothing closes the summer quite like the Ploughing Championship. You pile the family into the car and head off at the crack of dawn ready to stock up on your yearly supply of stationery. What could be better?
- Farmers Journal, 27th May 2016
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Tuesday, May 31, 2016
Tuesday, May 24, 2016
Farm Incomes Rise Despite Collapsing Milk Prices
Farm Incomes Rise Despite Collapsing Milk Prices
Average farm incomes up by 6% to € 26,526 Teagasc says but income on dairy farms is down by 4%
Despite a collapse in milk prices, average farm incomes in the Republic rose by 6 per cent to € 26,526 last year, according to Teagasc.
The group’s National Farm Survey shows average income on dairy farms fell by 4 per cent to € 63,020 amid a 20 per cent fall in prices.
The study is widely regarded as the definite measure of agricultural income in the Republic.
It suggests dairy farmers compensated for declining prices by expanding production, which was facilitated by the lifting of EU milk quotas.
Almost one in three dairy farms increased their milk production by 20 per cent or more, with just one-fifth of farms choosing to reduce output.
“The lower milk price in 2015 meant that dairy farmers had to increase their milk output by at least 20 per cent to just maintain their income at the 2014 level,” said Dr Thia Hennessy, head of the Teagasc farm survey.
In contrast to milk prices, cattle prices rose between 6 and 16 per cent depending on animal type.
As a result, average farm income on cattle farms rose between 29 and 34 per cent to €12,904.
The relatively low figure in this sector reflects the predominantly part-time nature of beef farming.
Tuesday, May 17, 2016
As Silage Season Draws Close – Think Safety First
As silage season
draws ever closer, it’s time to turn our attention to one of the most dangerous
parts of farming – using machinery.
Changing habits
to avoid risky shortcuts with machinery could be a life saver this silage
season.
If a machine
becomes blocked while cutting grass, or baling silage, disengage the PTO and
turn off the tractor before attempting to clear the blockage.
When working on a silage
clamp, it’s best to work slowly in order to avoid a tip. Always check trailer
lights before towing on the road and take care to maintain a safe speed
especially on narrow road.
Tractors and machinery are the main causes of farm
accidents in Ireland, so with silage season beginning it’s important to be
safety conscious.
Before cutting,
ensure that all tractors and machinery are in good working order:
·
Make sure that the machine is in a safe operating condition. All guards
and safety devices must be in place and functioning correctly.
·
Make sure that machines and trailed equipment are correctly attached to
the tractor or vehicle.
·
When attaching a machine, take the correct position in order to avoid
getting crushed.
·
Always stop the machine and the tractor before attempting to carry out
maintenance work or to free a blockage.
·
Make sure that the machine is adequately supported before working
underneath.
·
Always turn off the PTO (Power Take Off) and the tractor before
attempting to free a blockage or adjust a machine.
With cutting
often going on long into the night, it’s important to ensure that all lights,
mirrors and wipers are functioning correctly.
It’s also
important to ensure that the brakes on the tractor are in good working order
and that the handbrake is fully operational.
Farmers should take care when
working with overhead power lines and take precautions to ensure that machinery
doesn’t come into contact with the power lines.
Thursday, May 12, 2016
Invest in Worm Control to Promote Productivity in the Dairy Herd.
The current
problems of low milk prices faced by dairy farmers mean that increasing
productivity is even more critical. Low milk prices mean that maximising the
number of litres produced and minimising the cost of production is paramount.
To do that requires ensuring that cows are in the best physical shape, allowing
them to deliver in terms of milk yield and solids.
The Gutworm
threat
Infections with
Gutworms are very much an underestimated cause of reduced performance in
pastured dairy herds. Previously it was always assumed that adult dairy cows
could easily deal with parasitic infection and that such infections would not
have any detrimental effect on productivity. Recent evidence has emerged
regarding the negative impact that gutworms can have on the productive
performance of adult dairy cows.
The effects of gutworms in
dairy cows can be divided into clinical and subclinical effects. Outward
visible symptoms-clinical signs of gutworms including scouring and rough coat
are relatively unlikely to occur in adult dairy cows. This is more common in
young stock during their first or second grazing season.
Losses in the
animal’s productivity without outward clinical signs, otherwise known as
subclinical effects are the much more common presentation in adult dairy cows.
Subclinical infections are more difficult to detect but are a major cause of
reduced productivity in dairy herds. Adult dairy cows can harbour a large
number of gastrointestinal parasites (mainly Ostertagia ostertagi).
One 1999 study
found that between 83% and 100% of culled dairy cows were infected with gut
worms. If as this study suggests, most herds are suffering from a high gut worm
burden it means Irish dairy farmers are losing money as a result.
Dairy cows are
bred to produce vast quantities of milk and are therefore under nutritional
pressure so even a few parasites can reduce production in these high yielders.
For example, the same burden of worms in a suckler cow is likely to cause
little or no production losses. Because of the demands of lactation it takes
fewer parasites in high producing dairy cows to cause economic losses than it
takes in lower producing animals that are not under the same pressures.
Gut worms can also affect the
animal’s immune system. Animals harbouring a gutworm infection will be
immunosuppressed. This can interfere with the animal’s ability to deal
effectively with infections that they are exposed to. The freshly calved,
transitional cow is already immunosuppressed and the presence of worms
magnifies this immunosuppression.
The benefits of
worming dairy cows with an Eprinomectin cased wormer:
1. Milk Yield
Numerous studies
have shown that a worming treatment of dairy cows can result in a positive milk
yield response. Studies show up to a 2l increase per cow per day. The quality
of the milk produced from treated animals is also superior, with consistently
higher milk fat, protein and overall milk solids.
2. Animals graze
longer
Treated animals
have also been shown to graze for up to an hour longer each day, which can
increase their DM intake by up to 1kg per day. Milk yield is positively
correlated to dry matter intake. High dry matter intake (DMI) results in high
nutrient intake and therefore higher milk yield, where the difference in yield
was up to 2.35kg/day between treated and nontreated, and is particularly marked
in heifers.
3.Fertility
Not only are there significant
benefits to worming treatments in terms of the production parameters, the fertility
indices of treated animals can also be significantly improved, with improved
calving to conception intervals associated with treatment at calving13, and
higher conception rates at first service (58% treated animals V 38%
nontreated).
Diagnoses
A bulk tank milk
test for the measurement of antibodies to the main gutworm -Ostertagia
ostertagi exists. This test helps to give an indication of the level of
exposure within a herd to this harmful gutworm. The results of this test
are expressed as a ratio and offer an excellent tool to assess parasitic burden
within a dairy herd. The higher the ratio the greater the potential benefit of
treatment of that herd for gutworms. Overall the Bulk Tank Milk Tests can be
used to identify those herds where the greatest milk yield response after a
worming treatment is expected and can contribute to a strategic and justified
use of an anthelmintic.
Lungworm in
Dairy Cows
Over the last
number of years the problem of coughing dairy cows has become much more
prevalent. Reinfection Hoose or lungworm can be the cause of this. When the
immunity of these adult animals is low, they can become parasitised by lungworm
larvae, resulting in the clinical signs of coughing, milk drop, weight loss and
secondary bacterial infections. If adult cows that are only partly immune to
lungworms are exposed to heavy larval challenges from pasture they may develop
severe respiratory signs.
Pasture grazed
by calves will be likely to have a heavy larval burden. In situations, where
wet weather follows a period of dry conditions this can cause a mass release of
lungworm larvae from dung pats increasing the likelihood of animals developing
lungworm.
Diagnoses
Clinical signs of lungworm
include coughing and difficulty breathing, as well as milk drop, weight loss
and death in severe cases. Famers should remain vigilant of these clinical
signs and take steps to treat appropriately.
Treatment
As soon as
lungworm is identified in a herd, it is extremely important to treat the whole
herd and to instigate treatment as quickly as possible. Delaying treatment can
result in permanent damage to the lungs, affecting the animal’s long term
performance as well as making them more susceptible to secondary infections.
Treating cows with lungworm is quite different to treating cows with an
underlying gut worm burden. Cows with lungworm are clinically sick while, those
with gutworms are more likely to be clinically well but production may be
compromised.
Tuesday, May 10, 2016
New Minister for Agriculture Michael Creed Sets Out His Stall
New Minister for Agriculture Michael Creed Sets Out His Stall
The new Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Michael Creed has said that he had no advanced inkling that he would be appointed to the position.
Speaking on C103fm the Cork North West TD said that the Dail was due to reconvene half past five and the bells had begun to ring.
“I said ‘that’s it, another ministerial bus missed’. Literally as the bells were ringing the Taoiseach’s office rang looking for me and the Dail was put back by three quarters of an hour.
“So that’s how it happened. I had no advanced inkling of it.”
Minister Creed said that he is looking forward to working with the industry and with farming bodies and to try do his best for the country for an industry that is a multi-billion euro one.
He then paid tribute to Simon Coveney, his predecessor and said that did an enormous amount of work.
There was a time in previous administrations when the industry was collectively referred to as a sunset industry.
“In fact I see it as entirely the opposite way it’s been an engine for our economic recovery. There’s a great job of work to be done there in building a coalition between those inside the farm gate and those outside it.
“We are a trading economy, exports are our lifeblood and the more we can export the better prices are secure.
“All the commodities are in difficulty in terms of prices paid to the primary producer, that’s a huge challenge.
“The State isn’t a purchaser of milk or beef, but there are issues in terms of policy we will be working on to ensure that those people can get a just reward from the huge endeavours they put in.
Minister Creed said that he has had contact already with IFA and the other farming organisations and that he’s looking forward to meeting them.
He said that young farmers are the future of agriculture and the age profile of farming is a concern.
It’s great to see places for example Darrara agricultural college bursting at the seams with people wanting to have a career in agriculture.
“I think it’s the ultimate vote of confidence by young people and it’s also a signal to people like myself that we have to make sure that these people can earn a decent living from this.
“I see it as my duty, that wherever a good idea comes from, I’m not prejudiced against it because it may not have originated in my department or Fine Gael.
“I’ll work with anybody that has a decent, constructive viewpoint that serves the industry well. So, independents, opposition… I’m open to good ideas from any quarter,” he concluded.
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