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<blockquote data-quote="milkmaid" data-source="post: 155750" data-attributes="member: 852"><p>I'll second that. I have a pen with three ("wild"-not show) heifers, and some days they'll just stand on the other side and not even budge when I pour the grain in. They're just bored - same routine, day in and day out. I come over and give them grain twice a day. Hay in the feeder free choice. Water in the trough. Nothing new. Sure, they'll eventually wander over, but it takes awhile. </p><p></p><p>I've found that something as simple as just restrawing their pen can give them the break in the routine that they need. It needed restrawing last night, and all of them were racing around, kicking up their heels, playing with the bales of straw, and and then thundering to the other side of the pen...and this morning all three of them buried their noses in the grain.</p><p></p><p>One day I left the gate ajar while I was in the pen, and they were gone in an instant. LOL. After 5-10 minutes of chasing them off the road, I had them back in their pen. But...they sure ate well for the next few days after that. It's just a boring life being a cow, cooped up in a little pen, same routine every day, same people - they need a bit of a change from time to time.</p><p></p><p>I walked my show steer a good 1-2 miles down the road every day up until the fair...and he cleaned up 28lbs of grain every day plus free choice hay. Exercise stimulates their appetite same as taking a walk does for you.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>Again, I'll second that and so will everyone else. I bought a bottle calf for my show steer this past summer - something that wasn't going to be able to get in the grain bin, or if he did, he wouldn't get much grain - but was just <em>company</em>. I <em>never </em>keep less than two animals to a pen except in special cases - like a sick animal.</p><p></p><p>Shoot, put another animal of the same size in his pen, and just mentally divide the amount of feed by half. That's how much your steer is eating. You don't have to have it figured down to the last ounce, do you??? At this point, just get him to EAT, and later, <u>LATER</u>, when he's eating well, worry about exactly how much it is.</p><p></p><p>Vary his routine, take him for a walk, give him something to do. And we <em><u>still </u></em>don't know just what he's eating or what he weighs right now - you're leaving out the important information.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>We've discussed this before...I remember. I'm not overly impressed with your ag teachers. They have <u>not </u>done everything, and they have <u>not </u>done the obvious things - like exercise and a buddy. No one out there knows everything, and you need to take advice from different people, use what you can, what you like, and <em>what works</em>, and discard the rest. It's YOUR steer - you do <em>whatever </em>you need to do and <em>whatever </em>it takes. Their advice is evidently not working in this situation. Discard it, and do something different.</p><p></p><p>There's my opinion, and I'm done. Take it or leave it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="milkmaid, post: 155750, member: 852"] I'll second that. I have a pen with three ("wild"-not show) heifers, and some days they'll just stand on the other side and not even budge when I pour the grain in. They're just bored - same routine, day in and day out. I come over and give them grain twice a day. Hay in the feeder free choice. Water in the trough. Nothing new. Sure, they'll eventually wander over, but it takes awhile. I've found that something as simple as just restrawing their pen can give them the break in the routine that they need. It needed restrawing last night, and all of them were racing around, kicking up their heels, playing with the bales of straw, and and then thundering to the other side of the pen...and this morning all three of them buried their noses in the grain. One day I left the gate ajar while I was in the pen, and they were gone in an instant. LOL. After 5-10 minutes of chasing them off the road, I had them back in their pen. But...they sure ate well for the next few days after that. It's just a boring life being a cow, cooped up in a little pen, same routine every day, same people - they need a bit of a change from time to time. I walked my show steer a good 1-2 miles down the road every day up until the fair...and he cleaned up 28lbs of grain every day plus free choice hay. Exercise stimulates their appetite same as taking a walk does for you. Again, I'll second that and so will everyone else. I bought a bottle calf for my show steer this past summer - something that wasn't going to be able to get in the grain bin, or if he did, he wouldn't get much grain - but was just [i]company[/i]. I [i]never [/i]keep less than two animals to a pen except in special cases - like a sick animal. Shoot, put another animal of the same size in his pen, and just mentally divide the amount of feed by half. That's how much your steer is eating. You don't have to have it figured down to the last ounce, do you??? At this point, just get him to EAT, and later, [u]LATER[/u], when he's eating well, worry about exactly how much it is. Vary his routine, take him for a walk, give him something to do. And we [i][u]still [/u][/i]don't know just what he's eating or what he weighs right now - you're leaving out the important information. We've discussed this before...I remember. I'm not overly impressed with your ag teachers. They have [u]not [/u]done everything, and they have [u]not [/u]done the obvious things - like exercise and a buddy. No one out there knows everything, and you need to take advice from different people, use what you can, what you like, and [i]what works[/i], and discard the rest. It's YOUR steer - you do [i]whatever [/i]you need to do and [i]whatever [/i]it takes. Their advice is evidently not working in this situation. Discard it, and do something different. There's my opinion, and I'm done. Take it or leave it. [/QUOTE]
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