Summer is the laziest time of year for a dairy farmer but when Wayne and I started writing a “to do” list yesterday, my head began to spin a little. Not satisfied with a mild head rush, I went on to draft a rough calendar:
The Annual Milk Maid’s To-Do List
Lazy Summer Days
- Milk cows
- Pay bills
- Deal with crises (pump breakdowns are popular this season)
- Begin drying cows off for their annual holiday
- Make hay
- Have we conserved enough fodder? Consider buying more
- Begin feeding silage, crops and hay
- Return cow effluent back to pastures
- Spend a day changing rubberware in the dairy
- Control blackberries
- Vaccinations, drenching, branding, preg testing
- Big maintenance projects (the stuff you put off the rest of the year)
- Dream of the next Great Leap Forward
Autumn Anxieties
- Milk cows
- Pay bills
- Deal with crises (milk quality issues popular this season)
- Continue drying cows off for their annual holiday
- Special feeding regime for expectant cows
- Welcome and nurture new calves
- Test soils for nutrient levels
- Repair cow tracks
- Sow new pastures
- Fertilise pastures
- Return cow effluent back to pastures
- Chase revegetation grants and order trees
- Maintenance
- Still feeding silage and hay
- Nude rain dancing in full swing
Winter Woes
- Milk cows
- Pay bills
- Deal with crises (calving emergencies popular this season)
- Welcome and nurture new calves
- Fence and spray areas for revegetation
- Spend a day changing rubberware in the dairy
- Feed three groups of cows different rations
- Mating program in full swing
- Consider another drenching
- Buy new gumboots and practise rain dancing in reverse
- Redo budgets after milk factory announces opening price
- Keep chin up
Supercharged Spring
- Milk cows
- Pay bills
- Deal with crises (unpredictable weather popular this season)
- Train the new members of the herd
- Visit the accountant (and maybe the banker)
- Fertilise, fertilise, fertilise
- Vaccinate and wean calves
- Thoroughly clean and disinfect the calf shed
- Plant trees
- Control thistles
- Make silage
- Sow summer crops
- Make grass angels
I know I’ve missed stuff – lots of it – but it should give you an idea of what happens day-to-day and season-to-season on our very average Australian dairy farm. So, dear Reader, as we head into 2013, what do you want to know more about?