Cattlelow
Well-known member
Can you feed cows bread? If so, how much?
My father did the same thing for several years at the Mrs Bairds outlet store. (They are now owned by Bimbo Bakeries, a Mexican outfit..don't ask me how they came up with that name) He would get a pickup bed load at a time and store it in some 55 gal pasteboard barrels with ring lock lids but he left it in one of them too long, and the bugs got in it and I'm here to tell you, that bread can go into a liquid state and you DO NOT want to smell it.@Lee VanRoss, interesting: I have 3 cows that will fight over banana peels but if it's the whole banana, they practically take my hand off. And baby carrots.
@Cattlelow, I've posted this pic before but, yes, they love bread and it's fine as a treat. Prior to Hostess going bankrupt, there was a Hostess outlet in town and I would get racks of "day old" bread, Twinkies, doughnuts, bagels, etc.
Www.lawnstarter.com has some additional info on feeding clippings.I have fed my cows/calves table scraps and grass clippings for years. Every meal they get from what is being thrown away is
shekels in my pocket. It also teaches them to try something different rather than being starved into it.
They go bananas for apple peelings and watermelon rinds but not bananas......
Be careful with anything from the house yard. No elephant ear leaves and no yew trimmings or anything that has had chemical applied.
ie use common sense
I think that feed is different than bread right out of the package. There is a place here in Okla , I guess they are still in business, that you can buy what you are talking about and it is good feed. But bread straight out of the package will mess up a cow , clogs them up. I know we had it happen and had to have a vet out on one. I also knew a man that fed bread but would take a torch and burn the packaging off said it dried it out enough that it would not hurt them ?????? I don't know if that would work or not , never tried it ????I know a guy who fed tons of ground bread and pastry. There were little flakes of color in the pile. I asked what they were. He said it was pieces of the packaging. They were about the size of a pin head. Paper and plastic. Small enough that thyey went right through the steers. He fed very rank old reed canary grass hay and ground bred free choice. He was getting 3 pounds a day on Holstein steers.
I think that is different than bread right out of the package . We have a place here in Oklahoma that sells what you are talking about, I guess they are still in business ???, and it is good feed . But bread right out of the package can mess them up, clogs them up , I know we did it and had to have a vet out. I knew a man that would burn the wrappers off with a big torch of some kind and said it dried it out enough that it would not hurt them ???? I DON'T KNOW , NEVER TRIED IT ????I know a guy who fed tons of ground bread and pastry. There were little flakes of color in the pile. I asked what they were. He said it was pieces of the packaging. They were about the size of a pin head. Paper and plastic. Small enough that thyey went right through the steers. He fed very rank old reed canary grass hay and ground bred free choice. He was getting 3 pounds a day on Holstein steers.
All I see are Buns in the back of that Hummer. I think you took all the Twinkies and Dounughts for yourself......@Lee VanRoss, interesting: I have 3 cows that will fight over banana peels but if it's the whole banana, they practically take my hand off. And baby carrots.
@Cattlelow, I've posted this pic before but, yes, they love bread and it's fine as a treat. Prior to Hostess going bankrupt, there was a Hostess outlet in town and I would get racks of "day old" bread, Twinkies, doughnuts, bagels, etc.
Could it ferment longer, say 6 months or so?Www.lawnstarter.com has some additional info on feeding clippings.
Do not feed them to horses and this was written for cattle:
"Cattle, on the other hand, can safely consume fresh grass clippings as long as they do so within 8 hours of mowing. This is when fermentation and decomposition begin. During fermentation, cattle tend to avoid them, but once the clippings have gone through ensiling — where sugars are fermented into organic acids — the resulting silage can be consumed.
In a fairly new venture, a Wyoming based landscape company has developed a landscape waste compactor that converts lawn clippings into cattle-safe silage in about 28-days. The process takes clippings into 1-ton poly-lined, sealed sacks and allows the biomass to ferment into usable livestock silage."
LMAO! Well, that way I could just cram 'em in and then stack the boxes of the really good stuff in the passenger seat & floor. Not a Twinkie or Hostess fan, but I'll plow through a bag of Oreos!All I see are Buns in the back of that Hummer. I think you took all the Twinkies and Dounughts for yourself......
By the way, how is your husband doing? Is he healing?
we were not feeding it as treats we were feeding it and little bites or big bites it can clog them up. The dried processed into a feed bread that you can buy is good feed and will not clog them. I had an aunt that had a trailer built and bought several tons a year bulk and fed a bunch of cattle on itWouldn't it be easier & safer to simply take the time to remove the packaging and break or tear the bread (or Twinkies, doughnuts, etc) into smaller pieces? That's what I did for years and it wasn't a big deal, nor did I ever have any cattle get clogged up - BUT they were treats & certainly not even a supplement to their nutrition.
View attachment 9226
I KNEW you couldn't stay silent or not log ini feed bread all the time moldy or not won't hurt them them eat moldy hay