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 Little River, TX | Out west of here there are "paddocks" in the well > 100 Acre size. Think in terms of stocking rate per Section. A ranch with 8 cows per section is one thing. Put 100 cow calf pairs on a section and be prepared to mover them in a few days and not to come back to that section for 6 months or a year.
Some folks rotate every week, a few two times a day. It all depends on your management goals.
With the step in post it is no problem to harvest for hay or haylage 3 or 4 paddocks all in one effort. Better yet is to manage for standing cured forages for the off season. Cows can and will dig through snow for standing hay. A rule of thumb is it cost 15ยข per day to graze and $1.50 per day to feed harvested forages.
A neighbor uses rotational grazing in a stocker operation, all on rented ground, with varying sized pastures. He moves them with a cattle truck. Darn cows line up to get on the truck and never need a trap or corral.
NVDave and others have hinted that it is the forage that is important. Ruin you pastures with over grazing and ruin any profit potential. Just remember you are not in the livestock business you are in the forage business and use livestock to harvest and market forages.
In defense of moving daily, I do hope you and others check their cattle at least one time a day, that you check the fence on much the same schedule. If you do this you can move livestock every time you go out to check them for health, water and feed.
A real interesting system is my neighbors. He runs cattle, & goats together. They all know that where the portable mineral feeder is is where they belong. They just follow the thing on skids. Many times he does not even close the gate.
Just remember you will have to get water to the stock. That can be permanent water or portable tanks and a hose.
Kentucky has a lot of good information that applies well in the East.
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