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Fescue frustration
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<blockquote data-quote="MarkM" data-source="post: 957937" data-attributes="member: 14563"><p>As the summer wore on it became obvious which of my animals were tolerant of my endophyte fescue and which ones were not. These animals are rotated daily and have easy access to piped in water in a trough.</p><p></p><p>I would have the same animals panting and drooling, heads hanging down and looking like they were going to die. It would not have surprised me to find one dead. Some animals appeared completely normal.</p><p></p><p>Finally, the weather broke. Cooler temps and rain. The dormant fescue took off. The animals appeared happy. For the past ten days they have been on paddocks that were probably 50% fescue, 30% bermuda and 20% "other" with little to no clover.</p><p></p><p>Last Thursday I went to move the animals (an unusual afternoon move). Temperature 74, humidity 60%. The entire herd was heat stressed. I had animals drooling that had done well all summer. Even many of the calves were struggling. I put off the move (about ½ mile) until the next morning. The animals had been showing some increasing signs of heat stress for the past few days even though the temps were moderate. I was SHOCKED at the condition of the animals this day. By later in the evening, everyone seemed normal again.</p><p></p><p>My biggest concern is what this portends for next summer. I had already decided that I would give everyone a second summer to see how they did before I culled. I had made a list of the poorest throughout the summer. If next summer looks like last Thursday, I would have to think of culling everyone.</p><p></p><p>Why the big decline so late in the season? I thought the endophyte was concentrated in the seeds and stems. The deterioration seemed to coincide with the latest growth spurt of the fescue.</p><p></p><p>Is there any chance that some of the poor ones will do better next year?</p><p></p><p>I will be frost seeding clover this winter in front of the herd, but I can't imagine it making that much of a difference.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MarkM, post: 957937, member: 14563"] As the summer wore on it became obvious which of my animals were tolerant of my endophyte fescue and which ones were not. These animals are rotated daily and have easy access to piped in water in a trough. I would have the same animals panting and drooling, heads hanging down and looking like they were going to die. It would not have surprised me to find one dead. Some animals appeared completely normal. Finally, the weather broke. Cooler temps and rain. The dormant fescue took off. The animals appeared happy. For the past ten days they have been on paddocks that were probably 50% fescue, 30% bermuda and 20% "other" with little to no clover. Last Thursday I went to move the animals (an unusual afternoon move). Temperature 74, humidity 60%. The entire herd was heat stressed. I had animals drooling that had done well all summer. Even many of the calves were struggling. I put off the move (about ½ mile) until the next morning. The animals had been showing some increasing signs of heat stress for the past few days even though the temps were moderate. I was SHOCKED at the condition of the animals this day. By later in the evening, everyone seemed normal again. My biggest concern is what this portends for next summer. I had already decided that I would give everyone a second summer to see how they did before I culled. I had made a list of the poorest throughout the summer. If next summer looks like last Thursday, I would have to think of culling everyone. Why the big decline so late in the season? I thought the endophyte was concentrated in the seeds and stems. The deterioration seemed to coincide with the latest growth spurt of the fescue. Is there any chance that some of the poor ones will do better next year? I will be frost seeding clover this winter in front of the herd, but I can't imagine it making that much of a difference. [/QUOTE]
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