by skyemoor » Sun 21 Aug 2005, 19:18:51
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'W')e have 40 ac., mostly suitable for grass though other crops can be grown on part.
We seem to be heading towards raising dairy calves (Holstein or Gurnsey) to sell as lightweight calves (300#) or feeders (700#). Our capital outlay is modest to this point and we can feed 15 new calves at a time.
Generally bull calves are taken from momma right after birth and raised on a bottle, then grain, then pasture until time to go to the feedlot. There isn’t much to be gained, money wise, feeding them to the higher weight on a small parcel. The labor intensive part is from day one to 300# so we may start doing some serious bottle warming.
Much has been said about subsistence farming, anyone else trying to make money from their land?
At the current time, we have 10 acres and are raising sheep. We raise about 32 lambs/year, and prices vary, though if all goes well we usually get about $100 each. So I have a long way to go before quitting my day job.
We also have a garden, though small right now (20x30), that reduces our grocery bill. And there is also the raspberries, blueberries, apples, pears, and grapes. Each of these will be expanded significantly this fall.
We plan to have draft horses, and look to foal about 1 every year or so.
We have an English Shepherd female, that we plan to breed once every other year or so.
English Shepherds are excellent herding/guarding/hunting dogs, otherwise known as 'the old scotch collie'.
We may return to running a couple of steers on our property, as they do well with sheep on the same pasture (eat different plants), so the output of the land can be increased.
We plan to offer to plant neighbors fields if the economy hits hard times, so that would augment our income flexibly.