12/12/06
                 Cutting the costs of wintering cows is the option Drew Bell
                   has chosen to make money on his 80-cow suckler beef enterprise
                   on 300 acres at Guyzance, near Acklington, Northumberland.
                  
                   
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                     Richard, left, and
                       Drew Bell with suckler cows at Hazon House. 
                     
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                  Drew Bell’s family first took on the tenancy
                   of Hazon House Farm in 1941 and it came into family ownership
                   in the 1950s. 
                 Now he farms the unit with his wife Mary and help from the
                   family only at weekends – son Richard is a beef and
                   sheep consultant for Promar International, daughter Mary is
                   a consultant midwife and younger son Charlie is a civil engineer. 
                 “This farm doesn’t generate two wages so we made
                   sure our family had a good education. Now, with the Single
                   Farm Payment, it’s about looking at costs again and
                   we are reducing the length of time our cattle are housed as
                   well as block-calving the cows,” said Drew Bell. 
                 “There’s nothing new in what we’re doing.
                   I built my first shed 36 years ago now we’re having
                   to outwinter stock again,” he added. 
                 New costings data published by the English Beef and Lamb
                   Executive (EBLEX) last month (November) revealed the true
                   cost of producing beef cattle on English farms - that average
                   beef producers are making a loss of between £74.37 and £425.39
                   per head. 
                 This 2005/2006 farm costings data contained in the latest
                   edition of EBLEX Business Pointers does not include the Single
                   Farm Payment, and also incorporates a number of non-cash costs,
                   including family labour and rent. 
                 At Hazon House, 90 acres is down to permanent pasture with
                   58 acres of ley grass, kale is grown on 32 acres with a further
                   81 down to cereals, the remainder being set-aside, rough grazing
                   and trees and yards. 
                 Daily labour is largely down to Drew Bell during the week
                   and contractors are used for establishment, harvesting and
                   baling work on the arable land, silaging, mowing and baling
                   on the grassland and a spreader is hired for manure. 
                 “The Single Farm Payment and Entry Level Stewardship
                   payment will cover the farm’s overheads at present,” said
                   Richard Bell. 
                 “However, overheads will increase with inflation and
                   the SFP is not index-linked. We still need to farm to live,” he
                   added. 
                 Wheat grown at Hazon producing three tonnes to the acre at
                   a value of £70 a tonne leaves a gross margin of £113
                   an acre once variable costs are deducted. But when direct
                   costs such as for contracting work, drying and storage are
                   taken into account, the net margin is only £5 an acre. 
                 To make a reasonable margin Richard Bell argues that a three
                   tonnes to the acre yield needs to average a value of £95
                   a tonne to break even. 
                 The Bells see the enterprise at Hazon centering around the
                   suckler cow herd but with dramatically reduced costs by shortening
                   the housing period by 60 per cent. 
                 Conventional cattle wintering costs amount to £245
                   a cow consuming an average eight tones of silage. 
                 When the real cost of silage is taken into account to include
                   fertilizer, spreading, contracting work and the grazing rental
                   equivalent plus wastage it adds up to £17 a tonne and
                   amounting to the largest part of the overwintering cost. 
                 Shortening the housing period by 60 per cent makes immediate
                   cost savings of £147 a cow. Added to that is £30
                   a head extra costs for outwintering the cows on kale and straw – still
                   saving £117 a head. 
                 “Cattle have increased in value by about £80
                   a cow further improving the margin to £197 a cow,” said
                   Richard Bell. 
                 Cow numbers at Hazon are currently running at 80 head although
                   expansion of the herd is ongoing to dilute the true fixed
                   costs. 
                 Tighter stocking rates result in better grass use. With less
                   silage ground required, the grazing area increases either
                   enabling more cows to be kept or inputs to be reduced, said
                   Richard Bell. 
                 “When block calving and outwintering, the best grass
                   goes into the cows and calves when they need it – to
                   produce milk and at serving time. 
                 “The routine is much shorter – 100 cows can be
                   fed in an hour – and the focus is on cow performance,
                   not silage making or leading straw and muck. 
                 “Machinery use is also reduced meaning it should last
                   longer.” 
                 Young cattle are wintered away from Hazon minimising the
                   need to invest in buildings compared with a much cheaper cost
                   of renting sheds. 
                 For the future Drew Bell will place emphasis on finding the
                   right type of cow and strive to achieve higher average weaning
                   weights all with the aim of holding onto beef price increases. 
                  © Copyright 2006 Jennifer
                    MacKenzie All Rights
            Reserved. 
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