Yeah but it’s the best grass... Well, besides Mary Jane, but we can’t feed THAT to cattle.Uh, my ISU agronomy classes taught that corn in fact IS a grass!![]()
Yeah but it’s the best grass... Well, besides Mary Jane, but we can’t feed THAT to cattle.Uh, my ISU agronomy classes taught that corn in fact IS a grass!![]()
It's just leaner.
I’ve got your beef....where's the beef?
Grass fed is generally tougher IMO. That said grass fed is the epitome of sustainable energy. Grass grows everywhere, cow eats grass, cow s*** feeds dead grass, repeat.
They taste completely different. Grass fed is better for the environment (not sure on the health side) but grain fed tastes many times better.I would say grass fed tastes just as good as corn fed, people who say otherwise have their Iowa corn goggles on. Different but just as good.
Grass-fed is better for the cow, and for us, heath-wise.
Grass fed beef has more gas, therefor more methane meaning it’s not really better for the environment but possibly worse.They taste completely different. Grass fed is better for the environment (not sure on the health side) but grain fed tastes many times better.
But it doesn't require combines, that chew up gas, or fertilizer that is terrible for everyone like grain.Grass fed beef has more gas, therefor more methane meaning it’s not really better for the environment but possibly worse.
Methane is supposed to be the worst gas on earth though. Plus are you hand cutting the alfalfa and grass and hand packing bales for non summertime? Guess what does that?But it doesn't require combines, that chew up gas, or fertilizer that is terrible for everyone like grain.
But it doesn't require combines, that chew up gas, or fertilizer that is terrible for everyone like grain.
Could you tell me where the gas comes from? Is it from the grass that the cows digest? Can you then tell me what happens to the grass when it grows and decomposes. And please tell me what it outgasses when it decomposes.Grass fed beef has more gas, therefor more methane meaning it’s not really better for the environment but possibly worse.
I will defer to you based on your moniker, but my little pasture has required 0 fertilizer in 7 years to support my small number of animals. I HAVE overseeded AND for the first two years in did use spot weed treatment to keep weeds down. But I would say that my animals and light mechanical manure "breaking" has been enough to raise the animals I raise. Great ground though, and I am in Iowa, it's hard to mess that up. I think I could harvest head per year on my 4 acre pasture, that is 8 head total with little need to even rotate.Grasses require fertilizer just like corn does.
A 3 ton/yr grass crop would require/remove 108 lbs of nitrogen, 39 pounds of phosphate, and 162 lbs of potassium.
A 200 bushel (5.6 tons) corn crop requires/removes 134N/70P/50K.
Per ton the corn is a more efficient use of nutrients.
I have no ******* idea what you’re trying to say.Here's the deal. There is good and bad grass fed beef, just as there is good and bad corn fed beef. There is plenty of crap to be had at Hy-Vee etc. And it is ALL corn fed. I guarantee I could put ANY piece of the two grass fed heifers I raised against ANY corn fed Angus you like and you'd be more than satisfied with the flavor, tenderness, marbling, etc. And chances are good choose mine. It just needs to be well managed when raising,b sweetened on a high quality Spring pasture and then harvested and aged correctly. If you know what you are doing with the production of the beef, you can get a great product. Corn fed is great, you can rest what you want, it's just stood to be so against something just because you're not used to it out unfamiliar with it.