Skagit
Silver Member
There's a documentary on Amazon called 'Milk Men' about dairy farms in the PNW, it's well done and I know several of the people in it personally, worth watching if the subject interests you.
There's a dairy over in NE Indiana called Fair Oaks Farms. They have 36,000 cows. 9 barns spread out over thousands of acres. Each barn has a merry-go-round that will milk 72 cows at at time. They also told us they get 8ish gallons per cow. The cows are free to come and go as they please. When they feel like getting milked, they stand in line and wait their turn for the merry-go-round, and climb on board as it goes around. A worker puts a chain across the back, cleans their teats, and sticks on the miller. The cow takes a ride around the thing and gets off at the end and heads back to the barn on its own to eat/sleep socialize with the other cows. It's a strange thing to watch, but they are herd animals and just follow each other around all day. Each animal is kept track of by RFID ear tags. Weight and milk production, etc...
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I remember seeing Mike Rowe on Dirty Jobs do a show on that dairy! It apparently revolutionized the show and what the Discovery channel was willing to cover. At the time it was already the #1 show on Discovery. A Farm Changed Mike Rowe?s Career - Ellinghuysen.com
Free flow dairies are becoming more normal. Growing up, we had cows nearby that were trained to climb stairs to the milking parlor. Fun to watch.
Holsteins average 23,000 pounds of milk in a year (nine months). That's over ten gallons a day during the nine month lactation. For perspective, they are about five feet tall at the shoulder. Having grown up around dairy farmers, I can attest to the 24x7x365 lifestyle. One year, one of our neighbors went to Disney world for a week. It was his first time of the farm for longer than three hours for forty years. But "If you love what you do..." Made me think about other careers...though I now raise cattle, just not as a dairy farmer. My life isn't that regular, and dairy cows are big on every day being exactly like yesterday, but even more perfect.
All the best,
Peter
Almost all of the small dairy farms have gone out of business.
The 40 - 60 cow dairies started going out in the early 70's,
by the 90's anything under 200 cows was small and now most of the dairy's left
are 3-5000 cow and getting larger.
For awhile it was hoped that the robotic milking machines would save some of the smaller
(under 200 cow) dairy's but it didn't happen. When they work right it is simply amazing to watch them in action.