| CAINE
FARMS CHOOSES CONVENIENCE AND GETS FEED QUALITY TOO
WAUSAUKEE, Wisconsin --- When Caine Farms purchased a TMR unit in
1990, they stored haylage in a 20 x 70 foot stave silo and relied
on a top unloader that plugged into the TMR.
“We needed
a faster out to get feed into the TMR. With the stave we had to
unload out of the top, and this was cumbersome,” says Paul
Caine, who farms with his two older brothers, Pat and Dan. “Setting
up the unloader wasted time. Then you have to shovel feed out, level
it off and drop the unloader.”
The addition of the TMR mixer spurred the purchase of Harvestores.
Their Harvestores
include:
- A
20 x 60 that was a 20 x 40 for 20 to 28% high moisture corn added
in 1987
- A 20 x 80
for haylage that can be switched to corn silage added in 1990
- A 20 x 80
for haylage and corn silage erected in 1999
- A 25 x 100
for haylage built in 2002
“Unloading
out of the bottom is nice,” says Paul. “When it is 30
below zero you just push a button. With the staves maybe after five
days you might have to go up with an ax and chop feed off the walls.
With a Harvestore you just climb up the hatch, fill, close it and
climb down. Easy in, easy out. There is no shoveling and setting
up the unloader to make sure it will run.”
The Caine brothers
own and rent 600 acres of hilly ground put into conservation tillage.
Crops include corn, corn for silage and alfalfa. Heifers run on
15 acres of pasture. At Caine Farms, Dan balances the ration, Pat
handles all the genetics plus accounting and Paul does machinery
maintenance.
The dairy was
started with a dozen cows, four of them registered. There are now
210 cows and the same number of young stock -- calves to freshening.
It’s a commercial herd that has been AI breeding for 50 years.
They use a parallel double-8 parlor built in 1995. Their DHIA rolling
herd average is 25,000 pounds of milk with a 3.85 percent test,
with1,018 pounds of butterfat and 762 pounds of protein.
The brothers had seven 7 x 8 100-foot storage bags in 1995.
“Bags
present problems. When it rains, the skid unloader sinks in the
mud and it gets messy. It’s not very convenient in the spring
when the frost goes out. With a Harvestore you can blow in dry feed
and it keeps fine. Just push a button and they will always run,”
Caine says.
He also does
not have affection for bunkers. “With a bunker, feed quality
suffers. There is waste and big chunks of mold get into the feed
and production suffers,” he adds.
Better
Lifetime Value
Caine says the
lifetime value of a Harvestore is better when he considers the costs
of bags, operating a skid steer unloader and wear and tear.
“Over a 20-year period, the rate of return of investment is
better on the Harvestore. You can wear out a skid steer, for bags
you have to rent the machine and get rid of the plastic. Labor can
be a problem fighting mud in the spring, or frost or extended rainy
periods,” he says.
How does a Harvestore
make a difference when handling high moisture corn? “Previously,
we had to pick corn and put it in a crib or hired a combine and
pay for all the gas. With a Harvestore it’s the fastest, easiest,
most simple thing to do for handling HMC at 20 to 28% moisture,”
he adds.
“With a Harvestore, you may end up paying a little more for
maintenance, but the payback is in labor savings. With a lifetime
value, you can fix any part of them,” he explains. “When
we take forages from the Harvestore to the TMR it’s always
consistent feed. Mold tends to affect palatability, metabolism and
general health. A happy cow equals consistent production.” |