Farms.com Home   News

Milk Production And Inventories Continue Shifting To Larger Herds

 
Milk production and inventories continue shifting to larger herds
 
Two decades ago, most milk came from farms with fewer than 150 cows, on which a farm family handled milking, herd management, and crop production for feed. Today, while the United States still has many herds of 50 to 100 cows, most cows and milk production have moved to much larger farms, which are usually still owned and operated by families, but rely on hired labor for most farm tasks. 
 
Farms with milking herds of at least 1,000 cows accounted for nearly half of all cows in 2012, up from 10 percent of all cows in 1992. Producers continued to increase herd size in that period; there were 17 farms with herds of 4,000 or more cows in 1992, compared to 95 farms in 2002 and 234 in 2012. Costs are an important reason behind the shift, as production costs appear to be substantially lower, on average, on larger farms.
 

Trending Video

Loading Feeder Hogs

Video: Loading Feeder Hogs

In this video, Tork & Sawyer load 4 loads of feeder hogs out of site 1 go to another farmer who wants to strictly raise feeder pigs.