Lucerne silage crucial for breeding sheep in prolonged dry spell

By John Thistleton
Updated May 2 2016 - 9:58am, first published 6:30am
DRY SPELL: Paul O'Connor feeding a mob of sheep with sileage on his land near Harden. Photo: Rohan ThomsonThe Canberra Times
DRY SPELL: Paul O'Connor feeding a mob of sheep with sileage on his land near Harden. Photo: Rohan ThomsonThe Canberra Times

FINELY chopped and buried for years as silage, lucerne ferments and smells sickly sweet when damp, and is being dumped to feed thousands of breeding ewes on Oxton Park, a major sheep-grazing and cropping enterprise near Harden in southern NSW.

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