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    Hay

    One of our neighbours who is calving now is finding his hay is not good enough to maintain his cows with a sucking calf. Prior to calving the cows looked full but once they calved they looked shelly and they lost condition fast even though they were getting all the hay they could eat. Now he is looking for better hay even though he has lots of bales in the stack yard. And apparently there is not much good quality hay out there.

    Is anyone else finding this? And what are people paying for hay and is there any decent hay out there or is it all poor quality even if it looks alright.

    #2
    Get a feed test!!!
    There is a lot of good looking but poorer
    quality hay out there. Some of the higher
    quality stuff is pricey because of it.
    I have seen good feed with a test running
    from 4-5c per pound.
    Take a look at the Ab Ag hay site.
    There may actually be better rations made
    with some of the straw/chaff and pellet
    combinations available this year.

    Comment


      #3
      Might be alot more effdective to feed a couple lbs barley with a strong protein supp. Protein helps the gut make use of poorer (low in digestable protein) quality roughage, and energy will put the milk back into the udder.

      As far a feed samples are concerned. The four legged critters have done the feed sample and do a much better job than the lab can do.

      The lab can't tell you the digestable protein nor the available energy of poor feeds.

      It make take considerable more dry matter from good hay to lift the ration to where it needs to be for a calving cow, looking to repair the birth cannal and feed a baby. The breeding season will be affected if the ration dosn't get lifted now. Now is the most critical time of the cows life but you know that.

      Comment


        #4
        PS - sounds like full bellies are indicating high dry matter consumption in an attempt to get enough real feed quality components. Cows will starve on full bellies, with poor low in digestable feed stuffs.

        Comment


          #5
          I was looking to buy some hay to stretch our silage but it isn't penciling at the moment. I need to be able to land 8% protein, 58% TDN here for under $75 a ton or I can produce the same with straw and pellets cheaper. The biggest problem is hay quality - most is little different to the good oat straw we can buy for 1.5c/lb in the yard. The other problem is distance and trucking - there seems to be a lot of hay in eastern Alberta this year which is too far to haul to where I am cost effectively.
          I think one thing is clear - with the quantities on offer and the reduced herd size it should be a buyers market but most of the sellers are still thinking they are in 2009 where it was a sellers market. I think there will be many thousands of bales available at severely reduced prices come June. I guess for sellers it just depends where you are located relative to the buyers.

          PS.I think your hay is priced right f_s, you are just too far away ;O)

          Comment


            #6
            We are having some problems with poor feed quality here also. I have put my old herd back onto running water no more snow only. The vet who I actually was able to talk into comming out to take a blood sample agreed they should not be on just snow. We have also cut out the pea straw completely in our rations. I am figuring the mineral we use is to low in Magnesium 0.4% UFA mineral is 5% so we are switching. 2 animals that I thought looked ok went down. Thankfully the weather is turning warmer. I also notice Ole Farms at Athabasca -1800 cows- calves in May our old herd is not due till April 6 and I am pretty sure we will push that back to May also

            Comment


              #7
              Down cows. That jumped off the page.

              That's something we've had to deal with since we've been grazing corn. If you have a cow that doesn't go to the mineral feeder, and there are some that are like that, they can become unbalanced and suddenly you have a big fat healthy cow just go down. In the corn's case, it's calcium that we're blaming. We switched to 3:1 mineral, which helped a lot. We also found that if we treat them right away as though they had milk fever, they respond just as quickly as a milk fever cow. We give them a couple of bottles of Cal-Phos, or something like that and it's amazing. We usually get one cow a year that does this. We haven't lost one. They have all responded.

              I wonder if this may work on a cow with a magnesium deficiency too? There is magnesium in these solutions too. Might be worth a try.

              SADIE, what do you think?

              Comment


                #8
                The stuff I am using is Cal/Mag/Phos 500ml

                I think we are going to buy all are mineral in one shot instead of picking up a few bags here and there every time we run out. I was told 1/2 bag/cow should be used per winter.

                Hopefully the blood test we are sending away will shed some light.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Kato---I practiced in a complete dairy practice in Prince Edward Island and we treated for CAL PHOS ---the true milk fever (Calcium Phos deficency).---That was back in 1976.

                  Beef Practice---east central Alberta and now running my own beef cows you see the same downer cow condition. That becomes Magnesium Defeciency, Grass tetany, or hypo-magnesium. Seen this many times over the years in the Beef Cow herd. Kept cases of Cal--Magnisium available at all times. Still keep a case on hand at our ranch. A small tip when treating Hypo-Magnesium in a beef cow. Put the first 500ml bottle or two under the skin when the animal is down first, or in the abdomen area (rt side) standing behind the cow (opposite the rumen) first before you put any (Magnisium 500mls) in the jugular vein. This way when the jug is half empty (in vein) those animals that get up and "take off" have slower acting soln (under skin or intra abdominal) so they can stay up and not relapse on you.

                  This fall at weaning I tried a new product of ALL TRACE bolus to calves at weaning (1 bolus/300lbs--max 2 boluses) in the calves. They recommend 2 boluses/adult cow---8 month release of trace minerals. "Heaven forbit I do not want to handle the adult bovine head again----applying tags causes enough swinging".

                  Feedback to Alltrace company was to perfect a smaller bolus for calves going to grass to give at spring branding (while on cradle). I believe there is some value in this product but more scientific research and clinical trials will be coming forward in a year or two.

                  Minerals in feed---anything, anyway that works to get the product in the animals ---I too am an observer on agriville to see what is working from others "trials and tips".

                  Comment


                    #10
                    The couple from the Prince Albert, Saskatchewan area that lost hundreds of goats, a few years back, experienced a similar problem. The wife told me that the CFIA stopped them from bringing in a bolus mineral supplement from the UK, which supplied their goats with adequate slow release minerals like COPPER, ZINC, MAGNESIUM. They only experienced problems AFTER they could no longer access these boluses.

                    It shouldn't surprise anybody here that humans are, in general, magnesium deficient also. If you want to feel better, I recommend taking magnesium citrate at bedtime (not at the same time as your other vitamins/pharma pills).

                    Animals turn on and off genetics with what they eat (including humans). In some ways, by drastically altering diets away from what is naturally available in the grazing environment during summer, we are creating newborns with a different dietary requirement than their dams.

                    There is truly some benefit in baling up weeds, or weedy cereal crops for the cows, as the weeds can sometimes provide better mineral content than the hay/crop. Our fixation with clean fields and monoculture crops/feed is smoke and mirrors when it comes to balanced diets.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Good quality hay in this area is also in short supply.
                      Part of the problem was the late start we got this year due to poor haying weather in June and early July. Most of the hay was put up over mature and lots weathered.
                      The late start meant no second cut to use to balance all the poor stuff.
                      I too am buying pellets and will be using more oat straw or grass seed residue.
                      Another part of the problem is all the hay fields are petering out here and at current cash crop prices are not likely to be reseeded.
                      Kathy,I think they call those weeds you refer to as accumulators.Some have evolved to be able to grow in soils that don't have sufficient micro nutrients to support most plants. I saw a list that categorized the ones that were best for the different nutrients but haven't been able to find it recently.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        SADIE, We tried the Alltrace bolus on the cows back in Scotland in the 80's and they were an abject failure. We had severe mineral shortages there particularly of copper which manifested itself in two ways - open cows and weak calves unwilling to suckle when they were born. We tried the bolus at fall preg-checking and by the time the calves were born in April they were weak and blood tests (on calves)showed their levels very low for the things in the bolus. It was reckoned the cows built a kind of film around the bolus which thickened and hardened preventing the contents being released. Can't say how it affected fertility in cows the following summer as we reverted to giving them loose mineral also. Horrible things to apply to cows - fighting cows heads, getting a few spat out and a few broken open with cows back teeth. Expensive, unpractical and useless in my experience.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Kathy wrote: "It shouldn't surprise anybody here that humans are, in general, magnesium deficient also. If you want to feel better, I recommend taking magnesium citrate at bedtime (not at the same time as your other vitamins/pharma pills).

                          Animals turn on and off genetics with what they eat (including humans). In some ways, by drastically altering diets away from what is naturally available in the grazing environment during summer, we are creating newborns with a different dietary requirement than their dams.

                          There is truly some benefit in baling up weeds, or weedy cereal crops for the cows, as the weeds can sometimes provide better mineral content than the hay/crop. Our fixation with clean fields and monoculture crops/feed is smoke and mirrors when it comes to balanced diets."

                          Kathy, I thought this was a very good post. I agree with all of it, and wanted to add something that everyone seems to overlook - all of this talk of defficiencies and balanced diets relates directly to 1 place - the soil. Every year we spend millions as agr. producers on top ups for our livestock when they run low on anything from trace minerals to energy and protein.

                          Why is it so difficult to look at improving the soil first? An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Healthy well mineralized soils provide forages and crops with all they require to be healthy, and they in turn feed the livestock and people with all they require.

                          Instead of Cal-Mag in a bottle, try Ca on the soil. Google GSR Calcium.

                          Instead of high copper/selenium minerals try copper sulfate on the soil or a whole range of other things that kick start the soil towards being healthy again. Anyone can do it, it just takes a little dedication in switching your focus from cures to prevention.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Update responding to two threads. Mineral supplementation and Poor Quality Hay.

                            This long cold stretch of 2010/2011 winter following the very water drenched 2010 hay growing season is really going to take its toll on the beef cow herd this spring. There is no "good quality hay" in this area. Hay production under irrigation has totally disappeared also in the last 3-5 years---Irrigation landowners have gone back to cereals/canola/lentils rather than grow hay for a rapidly shrinking cow-calf herd.

                            IMHO as a former large animal veterinarian and still in contact with basically the entire practicing veterinarians across the central prairies there is a huge increasing report of "downer cows" occuring. The situation will keep getting worse before it gets better spring 2011.

                            My 20 years of practice experience were faced with this dreaded problem. Poor quality "hay"---basically poor straw value, big rumen (gut filled) cows that go done on the producer. It starts with the downer cow (can't get up) and often a post-mortem. Again I was only a "mere" veterinarian but on autopsy the classical signs were checking the "fat pad reserves" on the carcasses body. Often the "fat pad" around the heart showed only signs of "jelly".

                            Lab results and blood tests always looked good to your client but like was mentioned on an earlier thread "blood test" and lab works are really for show and "covering your ass" if this case reached the "court-room" or when the SPCA is called in. Veterinarians in practice soon learnt to "run and hide" from these types of calls--It is a no win situation.

                            Downer cow syndrome you now have to convince the producer that you have to change the diet---good quality hay--try to find it. Bring on the grain ration--it is now high priced grain and if you do introduce grain you have to do it very slowly. A year like this with even a decent cull cow price (Less condition) might trigger a herd-sell off also.

                            Again 2011 winter--to spring calving season will hear some real experiences.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Respnse to mineral supplementation.

                              Again this has always been a challanging experience over the years I have been involved in the industry. What is the right ration. How do I get the daily intact to each of the animals in the herd, concern of some getting extra, what about concern of toxicity?

                              The All trace mineral bolus--When introduced to the practicing veterinarians showed some definate promise in different circumstances.

                              The All trace mineral bolus---administer 1 bolus/300lbs max 2 per animal to be used in ruminating animal on grass. Bolus stays in reticulum, active live is 240 days,sold in boxes of 20, need a seperate "balling gun"--the red spanbolet gun will not work.

                              Daily supplement from two boluses is:

                              copper 135.5mg
                              cobalt 2.0mg
                              selenium 2.1mg
                              manganese 69.4mg
                              zinc 111.5mg
                              iodine 4.1mg

                              vit A 4,580I.U
                              vit D 916 I.U.
                              vit E 9.0 I.U.

                              Used extensively with the dairy veterinarians in the drying up, pre-breeding season---very successful and immediately notice an increase in milk production per animal.

                              Rather than put the two boluses into the Beef COW---like gf mentioned the heads swinging and application problems I personnally tried this bolus in my 2009 fall and 2010 pre-weaning beef animals---very impressed with the body condition. Again I am involved in pen showing competition with pens of 5 pens of 10 feeder steers and open replacement heifers---I like/ will keep using it again but asked the company to have a smaller bolus 1 bolus/150lbs weight to put in spring calves going to grass. I'v received word that my herd will be part of a "clinical trial project" for spring of 2011.

                              Our operation sells open replacement heifers going to grass sale APRIL. For years have been challanged over the winter with Thiamine deficiancy,and other concerns with trace minerals. Loved the results using this product winter 2009-2010 preparing 50 head for spring "open replacement sale"

                              This product appears to be gathering interest from the purebred bull cattlemen to prepare their bulls for the upcoming sales in the spring. Again it is all about body condition, less handling of an animal, less work with "needle injection" making sure each animals is getting its adequate daily doseage.

                              This All trace mineral bolus was followed through on several studies with the WCVM and postmortems during the timeline of bolus in the reticulum. The disintegration of the bolus followed the timeline it was in the animal.

                              I also have used this as a treatment for that "poor condition" cow or bull that needed treatment last summer. As a career veterinarian it is becoming part of a veterinary clinics protocal in treating these types of animals.

                              Conclusion---by trying the bolus in mass on a part of my cow-calf operation it re-emphaszied the value of vit and trace mineral supplementation. I appreciate the practical suggestions from Happy Trails in supplementing the range cow.

                              The final stage would be to follow Pure Country and some how increase the nutrients in the forage as part of the land use management.

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