Yashar
Chillin' with the herd
I have been talking with a friend who thinks that breeding does every year puts less of a demand on them than milking through a season without breeding or drying them off. She says the several months of not milking outweighs the cost of making, delivering, and the large output at time of freshening.
I would think that running them trough would put less of a demand on them (less milk but for a longer time).
I experimented this last year and it seems as though it were the case in my situation.
I have Alpines, they have a long lactation gene, so I've read, and will produce milk for many years as long as you continue to milk them.
But, I was wondering what others had knowledge about in regards to this topic.
Experiential wisdom would be the most appreciated.
I would think that running them trough would put less of a demand on them (less milk but for a longer time).
I experimented this last year and it seems as though it were the case in my situation.
I have Alpines, they have a long lactation gene, so I've read, and will produce milk for many years as long as you continue to milk them.
But, I was wondering what others had knowledge about in regards to this topic.
Experiential wisdom would be the most appreciated.


The other problem with breeding that much is finding homes for so many kids. I ended up selling way under price to get rid of them because the market here is getting flooded with the lil' buggers. If your have a solid market for kids they would certainly help pay for feed and such. I'm not so lucky here in central MN and for me it makes sense to take my herd plan in another direction and that will include milking through. JMO though.