by backstop » Sat 18 Mar 2006, 14:48:40
I'd like to hear more from Mosa of the actual details of how the farm is set up, as we're rather under-informed to make much useful comment thus far.
For instance, the Carter years put over 60,000 brick-built methane digesters into villages in India,
but failed to test villagers' willingness to walk round their land each day collecting the dung and carting it to the village,
so by 1990 there were 60,000 digesters standing idle.
If, OTOH, the farm has the dung concentrated each day on concrete at the milking sheds, it's another matter.
If, as I suspect, the farm doesn't have enough land to spread the dung and are buying in feed for the stock,
then, given the clearly predictable oil-price-based rise in feed prices,
there may actually be a better case for re-orienting the farm to traditional mixed farming to avoid potentially ruinous dependence on trucked-in feed,
rather than for heavy capital investment in optimizing the return from the present daily dung output.
So Mosa, could you clarify your position on these matters ?
regards,
Backstop
Last edited by
backstop on Sat 18 Mar 2006, 15:19:49, edited 1 time in total.
"The best of conservation . . . is written not with a pen but with an axe."
(from "A Sand County Almanac" by Aldo Leopold, 1948.