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silversurfer
9th July 2010, 12:02 PM
Farmer says spraying milk on field improves grass
AP

KMOV.com

Posted on June 27, 2010

LINN, Mo. (AP) -- A Nebraska dairy farmer is drawing some attention in Missouri after stumbling upon what he thinks might be the secret not only to strong bones but to great grazing land: milk.

David Wetzel, a former steel executive, told a conference of farmers in Linn that when he started a second career as a dairy farmer in 2002, he doused parts of his 320-acre farm with skim milk, which was a byproduct of his farm's specialty butters and cheeses.

He soon discovered that his cattle preferred those fields. He called in an expert to figure out what was going on, and the result was a bit staggering: His milk-fed land yielded 1,100 more pounds of grass per acre than untreated land.

Wetzel spoke during a recent conference at the Osage Community center in Linn that attracted about 50 people, The Columbia Daily Tribune reported Sunday. It was organized by retired Osage County judge and cattle farmer Ralph Voss, who is trying out the milk method.

Wetzel said he began making butters and cheeses that required only the fats from the milk that his cows produced, which left behind large quantities of skim milk as a waste product. To dispose of it, he would drive up and down a portion of his pasture with milk pouring out of a tank. He dumped up to 600 gallons of skim milk on the field every other day.

"I came from a background that has nothing to do with farming," Wetzel said. "So I don't know the do's and don'ts. I don't have any relatives that would say, 'You can't do that.' So I just kind of did what felt right."

One day, he noticed that his cows favored that patch of field. The grass felt more supple and looked healthier and more dense in that area.

He eventually contacted Terry Gompert, a University of Nebraska Extension educator who specializes in holistic land management. Gompert arranged to have researchers test the milk hypothesis.

After 45 days, they found that the plots treated with milk grew about 1,100 more pounds of grass per acre than untreated plots, a 26 percent increase in yield. Also, the soil had a greater "porosity" or ability to absorb water and air.

Gompert stressed that much more research needs to be done. He said the findings make sense because milk is food for the bacteria, fungi, protozoa and nematodes in healthy soil.

"Our unfair advantage is getting the microbes to work for us," Gompert said. The milk "is just feeding the workers."

Many of the participants at the conference on Thursday and Friday said they may give milk a try.

"When you start spraying milk on your fields, you're going to be thought of as a fool," said Larry Sansom, a cattle farmer from Kentucky who drove six hours to learn about the method. "But I guess you've got to hold your nose and jump."

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Information from: Columbia Daily Tribune, http://www.columbiatribune.com

Ponce
9th July 2010, 12:22 PM
Till the freakind government come down on him and tell him not only NOT TO DO IT but also give him some kind of a fine.......................your government at work.

horseshoe3
9th July 2010, 12:27 PM
In addition to the bacterial action it is also a great lime fertilizer.

Quite an inefficient way to fertilize though. It takes an awful lot of grass to make milk. Much more than you would gain by pouring the milk back on. It would be akin to raising a good crop of corn and then plowing it back under before harvest so that the soil would have more nutrients for next year. Or like trying to run a motor and a generator off each other and expecting to get power out of the system. A fool's errand.

Book
9th July 2010, 12:47 PM
he doused parts of his 320-acre farm with skim milk, which was a byproduct of his farm's specialty butters and cheeses.



http://www.product-reviews.net/wp-content/userimages/2007/10/starving-children-in-africa-are-not-getting-enough-nutritious-food-from-world-aid.jpg

No...you can't have a glass of mike Kimba. We need to spray it on the ground.

:oo-->

vacuum
9th July 2010, 12:56 PM
How can you say there isn't a net benefit? Just like adding beef to cow feed, milk may have a perfect blend of nutrients for grass, since it came from grass. Just like taking a multivitamin can make a kid grow (even though the multivitamin itself isn't adding weight), perhaps a small amount of milk can provide a few key nutrients in the right form to allow grass to absorb sunlight and soil from the ground more efficiently.

Ponce
9th July 2010, 01:07 PM
I can only now wonder how (what do you called it?) colloid silver would work.........I think that I am going to experiment with it, will flowers last longer?, will insects avoid the area? will there be more apples, tomatoes and so on?...........something to think about.

horseshoe3
9th July 2010, 01:23 PM
How can you say there isn't a net benefit? Just like adding beef to cow feed, milk may have a perfect blend of nutrients for grass, since it came from grass. Just like taking a multivitamin can make a kid grow (even though the multivitamin itself isn't adding weight), perhaps a small amount of milk can provide a few key nutrients in the right form to allow grass to absorb sunlight and soil from the ground more efficiently.


"since it came from the grass" That's the key right there. It came from the grass, therefore it can't have anything the grass didn't have in the first place (unless the cow is also getting supplemental feed.) And if it doesn't have anything the grass didn't have in the first place, then it can't add anything that the grass needs.

Yes, it can add a few nutrients, but you have to consider where those nutrients came from in the first place - FROM THE GRASS. So you're not really adding anything, you're just replaceing A PORTION of what you took.

It's very similar to fertilizing with manure. Bringing in manure from outside the system will improve the soil. Allowing cattle to graze and drop the manure on the pasture they ate from will return most of the nutrients to the soil. You still have a loss from the system due to the milk or meat you harvested.