Tuesday, December 23, 2025

From one extreme to another, farmers have had it all.

Twenty-three acres of forage will provide grazing for at least 50 days for the 24 dairy heifers at Ohio State's Waterman Dairy Farm.

This week's All About Grazing column: Looking ahead could pay bigger dividends than anything else you do in preparing for winter.

The heart of grazing livestock is finding the balance between what the animal needs and what pastures can produce.

Most Ohio winters are relatively mild, but do you have a grazing plan in case your buried in deep snow?

Wayne County Extension Agent Tom Noyes shares numbers crunched on New York dairies.

If the weather cooperates, stockpiling can produce an extra 2,000 pounds of forage to be grazed.

What will this summer's forage season do to your feeding plans next winter? This week's "All About Grazing" column reminds you of the little things that have lasting importance.

Agriculture agent David Samples gives a brief overview on what he's learned about grazing small grain crops.

The question is what do we do with the overmature pasture and hay we have to contend with now and as our winter feed supply?