Hey Mike, I love your thread. I can't believe it took me so long to get started on it. I'm all caught up now - with the exception of a few places I skimmed cuz all the photobucket pictures were missing. Thanks much for taking the time to make such detailed posts about the farm, it's interesting!
Yeah, I gotta get them fixed before PhotoBucket goes total AWOL and doesn't function at all !! Thanks for reading through it all !!
You mentioned a FT city job a few times and posted up security cameras and you seem to have a lot of solid wifi gear for a farmer (and did I see you have a massive rack/patch panel at home?) and you work on farm tech, security system installs, etc...what's your FT job, technically?
With the farm I brought online today I am over 150 cameras installed on 15 dairies, 1 recycling center and my place. I have a Homonco two post rack in the basement with my 48port Leviton Cat6 Extreme patch panel, Pair of Ubiquiti 24 port switches, Drobo 5N filled with 5xSeagate 4Tb NAS drives, CyberPower OR2200L, Brother MFC and a Unifi Security Gateway. I don't know what my job is defined as but I do a wide variety of things at work.
Officially I guess I am a "IT Service Technician" meaning that I "primarily" deal with things with circuit boards and networking stuff. I get on a dozen farms once a month to do a full functionality check of all the milking equipment to help prevent downtime as well as help maintain 135 Lely Milking Robots. I also drive the supply truck if one of the 7 drivers needs time off and get to play sales guy for a day or two, which I really enjoy.
The accountant in me wants a lot more info here. $50/head for allll of that labor...! I totally get loving the farm life, but wow, I didn't think the profit would be that slim.
Farming is like a shower in a really old house ... it's hot and cold, on and off, profitable and not. It can go from one to the other quickly if not careful.
When the market was on the uptick I was netting almost $400/steer but now am doing just a shade under $100/steer. I'll gladly share whatever you'd like to know, nothing is a secret and if it is I'll tell you where to go
When it is sub-zero, you basically just have to keep the cattle in the barn and give them a little more feed, right? I'm in Oregon, my neighbors never had to worry about truly cold weather lol. Their cows would still come out in the pasture in all seasons - they knew where the feed was, and went inside when they were hungry (or maybe cold, but definitely hungry).
All my cattle are inside all the time. That being said, "inside" has a max of three walls. The cattle are sheltered from the nasty cold wind and such but are out in the cold. They get fuzzier and are fine. I let them eat as much as they need. I like them to be out of feed about an hour before I do chores so there isn't any old feed laying on the ground from the previous day. The cameras in the barn have really helped me know when they run out !!
Just curious, if you're willing to share, how does the rent contract work? Do you turn a profit all along - before the building is paid off?
The initial contract is for 10 years, which is also the length of the loan.
The barn is profitable while I am paying for it. Without throwing numbers around it'll replace about 12hrs a week of income from my in town job which is good because it'll only take an average of 2hrs a day to do the chores. 2hrs a day X 7 days a week = 14hrs a week. Oh no, I'm looking to be less busy, not more !! I may need to go back to math school !!!
What's the market rate on an lb of milk in your area?
It varies but right now it's in the $17/hwt. Milk is sold by the hundred weight ....
Heh, the markings on conduit are like clocking screws

Both should be done correctly!
I can deal with screws being off-kilter but conduit bugs me !!!