51AVÊÓÆµ

In Your Field: Ian Garnett - 'Maize crops are thought to be looking about a fortnight earlier than usual'

Mid-August and the weather continues to challenge us; in our case for silage making. Sneaking odd days is the best we have managed but quantity and quality have been surprisingly good for late summer.  

clock • 2 min read
In Your Field: Ian Garnett - 'Maize crops are thought to be looking about a fortnight earlier than usual'

Here on farm, we have a dedicated youngstock clamp for silage cuts which are made later in the year. I had a wry smile recognising how arguably the nicest silage of this year has just filled up this youngstock clamp. For non-livestock farmers, the later cuts generally mean lower quality silage which is best fed to the less productive youngstock. Such is farming. 

Pasture management has been a story of feast or famine depending on the weather at the time. Currently the grazing is quite nice. Overall grass covers within the grazing block are measuring 2,200kg/ha which I'm led to believe is respectable.  

Anecdotally, I hear that local maize crops are thought to be looking about a fortnight earlier than usual. Ours too is looking promising. It went in on May 5 and I believe the school of thought is that it should be ready five months after this date. However, if the blackberries and the subsequent colour of my daughter's fingers are anything to go by, we could be in for an early harvest. 

Baling contractors are advising me that straw is being baled in less-than-ideal conditions which is hardly surprising. Spare a thought for the farmers bedding boxes with a fork later this Winter.  

Potentially, there has been some good news this last week as we received a letter from Animal and Plant Health Agency notifying us that because the farm and others locally have not seen bovine TB for six or more years, we can move from six-monthly testing to annual testing. 

Interesting to note, we have had wildlife control measures in place for the past six years too. Once again recognition must go to all those who stepped up to organise those controls in the face of some significant hostilities from objectors.  

This week AHDB hosted a meeting to update progress within the world of breeding dairy cows. Uptake amongst us dairy farmers nationally, suggests we are taking more notice of PLI [Profitable Lifetime Index] and the benefit of breeding durable dairy cows.  

UK Dairy farmers are paying for these indexes and proofs in their levy deductions. These UK indexes are created with home-grown conditions, e.g. milk contract terms and weather constraints. Proofs generated in other countries would arguably be more appropriate for the conditions in those other countries. Like the saying goes, 'foreign proofs don't travel well'.

AHDB Breeding will be launching roadshows this autumn. These could be an ideal opportunity for those who are interested to see the good work first hand. I would encourage dairy farmers to go along to interrogate the data and see if they feel it has a place in their farms' breeding programs.   

More on In your field

In your field - Kate Rowell: "On a truly mixed farm like ours... the strength is adapting each year"

In your field - Kate Rowell: "On a truly mixed farm like ours... the strength is adapting each year"

Kate is a fifth-generation farmer running the 750-hectare (1,853-acre) Hundleshope 51AVÊÓÆµon the Haystoun Estate, Peebles, where the family have been tenants for 150 years. She runs the hill unit with her husband Ed and their four children. She is also a vet and chair of Quality Meat Scotland

Kate Rowell
clock 29 September 2025 • 3 min read
Young Farmer Focus - Jacob Duggan: "I still get challenged by farmers saying I should be milking all year round"

Young Farmer Focus - Jacob Duggan: "I still get challenged by farmers saying I should be milking all year round"

Jacob Duggan, 27, dairy farmer from the Isle of Man, discusses establishing his own farm, travelling and Young Farmers

clock 17 September 2025 • 3 min read
In your field - Dan Jones: "'Champion of the ordinary man' Nigel Farage looks more at home in a London bar than hefting sheep on the Orme"

In your field - Dan Jones: "'Champion of the ordinary man' Nigel Farage looks more at home in a London bar than hefting sheep on the Orme"

Dan Jones farms 650 ewes at the National Trust-owned Parc Farm, which sits on the Great Orme, a limestone headland which rises up 208 metres (682 feet) on the North Wales coast near Llandudno. His 51AVÊÓÆµBusiness Tenancy covers the 58 hectares (143 acres) at Parc Farm, plus 364ha (900 acres) of grazing rights on the hill

Dan Jones
clock 15 September 2025 • 2 min read