How many acres of land do i need to maintain these shitbags?
Anonymous 01/13/25(Mon)14:33:36 | 16 comments
shutterstock_481623085
Anonymous 01/13/25(Mon)14:41:49 No.2799864
>>2799863
The 1st floor of an average house.
Anonymous 01/13/25(Mon)14:45:30 No.2799865
>>2799863
If you need to ask on /out/, then the most realistic answer is more than you can afford and more than you will ever have.
Anonymous 01/13/25(Mon)14:55:29 No.2799866
>>2799865
I just want milk cows
Anonymous 01/13/25(Mon)18:19:10 No.2799897
If you could lick your own nostril, would you?
Anonymous 01/13/25(Mon)18:23:21 No.2799898
nearly 2.26 billion acres. nothing less will do
Anonymous 01/13/25(Mon)19:24:15 No.2799910
>>2799863
A couple of acres
Anonymous 01/13/25(Mon)20:23:21 No.2799918
Bout tree fiddy
Anonymous 01/13/25(Mon)21:30:44 No.2799931
>>2799863
Depends of the fertility of the land

How many inches of rainfall a year?

Will you plant forage or just have them graze existing forage ?
Do you have a tractor?
Will you buy in hay in the winter?
Anonymous 01/14/25(Tue)10:14:46 No.2799987
>>2799931
The land is in idaho.
Anonymous 01/14/25(Tue)10:36:43 No.2799994
>>2799866
>>2799987
The answer didn't change. More than you can afford and more than you'll ever have.
Anonymous 01/14/25(Tue)10:39:12 No.2799995
>>2799994
5 acres is affordable now. Im sure in a few years more acreage if affordable for when once bitshit crabs and the new bull market starts up
Anonymous 01/14/25(Tue)17:15:51 No.2800113
>>2799863
2 acres per cow is optimal
1 acre per cow if you live in a very lush area.
Anonymous 01/15/25(Wed)15:30:19 No.2800253
>>2800113
Totally depends on forage density. Idaho has everthing from lush meadows to high desert sagebrush steppe.
OP is larpeding and wont give details
Anonymous 01/15/25(Wed)15:33:20 No.2800254
>>2800253
>larpeding
niggawhat
Anonymous 01/15/25(Wed)15:35:36 No.2800255
>>2799863

https://agrilife.org/agnewsandviews/files/2018/06/Exotics-wildlife-livestock-AU-chart1.pdf
Anonymous 01/15/25(Wed)16:52:50 No.2800265
>>2800255
Keep bump