[Jacob-list] downsizing
    Linda 
    patchworkfibers at windstream.net
       
    Mon Aug 24 17:57:14 EDT 2009
    
    
  
We pay anywhere from $50/ton to $240/ton for hay, although I'm not sure 
I'm going to get much of the $240/ton hay this year.  It works out a 
little better in terms of having to haul it to supplement with alfalfa 
cubes or pellets and add some grain when I need to.It saves a bit of 
money to buy rolls, especially since the farmer has been rolling me 
300lb rolls - much easier to work with then the 1000lb rolls we used to 
get. Being self sufficient enough to grow your own hay certainly sound 
wonderful.
Linda
Thomas Carnes wrote:
>
> From our perspective, we play both sides of the inputs.  We grow our 
> own hay, and sell most of it.  We make enough on our coastal to buy 
> alfalfa (which we cannot grow here as a perennial crop) in the winter 
> with our coastal profits.  It would be much harder on us if we were 
> not able to grow feed.  I can see how being subject to all the price 
> fluctuations as fuel prices move would be very difficult.
>
>  
>
> **THOMAS P.**** ****CARNES**
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> *From:* jacob-list-bounces at jacobsheep.com 
> [mailto:jacob-list-bounces at jacobsheep.com] *On Behalf Of *Linda
> *Sent:* Sunday, August 23, 2009 6:28 PM
> *To:* Betty Berlenbach
> *Cc:* jacob-list at jacobsheep.com
> *Subject:* Re: [Jacob-list] downsizing
>
>  
>
> We're in a different situation here. Prices and demand for quality 
> breeding stock in the southeast has risen in the last few years. I 
> think the internet has alot to do with that. After a few years when 
> even finding hay was near impossible, hay is now fairly plentiful and 
> we are paying less for better hay. It has started to rain after five 
> years of drought, so my sheep get to eat grass sometimes. My yarn 
> sales are pretty good. And I'm getting younger (just joking..I'm aging 
> as fast(er) as everyone else - and I sure feel it on our hills). But, 
> Dave is semi-retired now, so I have more help now and feel younger at 
> the end of the day :-). We haven't had much luck in finding someone to 
> come do the little bit of clearing we'd hoped to do for more pasture, 
> which has been a setback. But it was a profitable year for me.
> I'm curious about the economics of not breeding all the adult ewes. 
> You still have to feed them. Unless you are separating them from your 
> bred ewe flock, they are eating just as much and producing only a 
> fleece to sell.  You won't be feeding the lambs, of course, and the 
> fleece would probably be a bit bigger.
>
> Linda
>
> Betty Berlenbach wrote:
>
> It sounds like the economic situation is taking its toll on us 
> breeders.  I have been bemoaning the fact that for the last 10 years 
> or so, grain and hay prices have skyrocketed out of control, but the 
> price of lambs, both as meat and as breeding stock, has pretty much 
> stayed the same. (I guess I should be grateful, in a way, as up here, 
> the prices of shetland sheep, which I also had as a cash crop, have 
> gone from $5-800 apiece to $200 or max, $300 apiece.  I got rid of the 
> shetlands!  I will have to downsize a little, and like Cathy, am 
> aging, and thinking that each year I go down a bit in numbers.  
> Hopefully, at some point, I will be able to switch to buying six lambs 
> in the spring, keeping them on pasture until November, and then, 
> shearing and butchering, after breeding and keeping them all year 
> becomes too difficult.  I do like having them here.  I will breed this 
> year, probably 12 ewes, but I might consider just breeding some of 
> them...We shall see. I don't have to make that decision until Nov. 1.
>
>  Betty, in Vermont,who now has a blog, thanks to help from Walter and 
> Linda.  See Betty's blog at http://sheepwoman.wordpress.com.
>
>
>
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