Most of us assume a farm accident or injury will never happen to us, yet it doesn’t take much to temporarily lay a person up. In this case, a simple nail through a board has left my father with his feet up on an unwanted holiday.

Our annual herd test is coming up shortly so, thinking we were being smart, the cattle on our out-farm were being trained to come into the holding area, eat some ration from a trough and be released again.

It was working quite well until the cows broke the end board off the trough. This remained hidden under grass until my father found it with his wellington on a dreary morning last week.

One tetanus shot and a course of antibiotics later, he’s thankfully well on the mend, but trying to keep him inside and off his feet was more work than taking over all the farm jobs.

The worst of those jobs has been trying to keep a bit of dry ground under the cows. As most of our land gets saturated fairly quickly, we’ve been giving the cows larger areas of grass to graze on. I know some other farmers would choose a completely different way of doing it, perhaps a smaller grazing area with a reduced time frame in those fields.

With our method, the cows might only traverse an area once in 24 hours as they move around between fields. If we closed our cattle into a smaller space for that length of time, we could probably start thinking of reseeding it without any need to plough the ground first. It’s less “cut your cloth to suit your measure” and more “graze your field to suit your soil”.