Soule: Where Do Cattle Like to Graze? At the Audubon Pasture
News
Concord NH
12 October, 2021
1:27 PM
Description
It's fall. Trees are about to burst into dazzling colors, frost is on the pumpkin, and Miles Smith Farm cattle are grazing beside the Audubon Center in Concord. Most of my cattle had been at the farm all summer, eating abundant grass fueled by prolific rain. This summer, we had so much rain that farmers rushed to cut, dry, and bale hay between storms. It was an abnormally hot summer, which helped, too. In previous years we'd get four or five hot, hot days. This summer seemed like week after week of sizzling temperatures. While I hid from the heat in my house, my cattle relied on shade trees and the run-in shed to stay cool. Cows don't normally pant, but I saw it this summer: Acorn, a pregnant Scottish Highlander, stood in the shade, mouth open, panting like a dog. Highlander cattle can survive New Hampshire winters because their long, double coats of hair protect them. But those same coats are uncomfortable in summer. Even when we clip off their hair, Highland cattle prefer cold over heat. In the past, when the grass at the farm runs out, we move them to a pasture we lease from St. Paul's School in Concord. Our cattle have grazed this field next to the Audubon Center for years. The former hayfield has no shade, which is why we didn't move cattle there until now. So the grass has had all summer to grow. Our "Cow Taxi" transported 11 cattle to the pasture to munch on the lush grass this week. And the cool weather means we don't need to worry about cattle getting heatstroke. Besides food, the cattle also need water, so we hire a pool company to fill three tanks that hold a total of 6,000 gallons of water. The water from the tanks runs down a hose to a trough. Once the trough is full, a float, like the one in a toilet tank, shuts a valve, stopping the water flow – most of the time. Sometimes a steer will push the trough over, and the water keeps flowing from the tank until it's empty. Bad steer! Read More Author Carole Soule is co-owner of Miles Smith Farm in Loudon, N.H., where she raises and sells beef, pork, lamb, eggs, and other local products.
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