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Fly Blocks
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<blockquote data-quote="dun" data-source="post: 412707" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>We've fed loose mineral with IGR or Rabon for years, seems to help.</p><p>hen I mopved the cows this morning I saw that they were out of minerals, had kind of expected it since they were in the same pasture a couple of days longer then I thought they would be, plus the fly wipe wass out of juice. Apparantly had been for a couple of days. I noticed as the cows went by that some had a pretty good number of flys, 100 or so, but that's a SWAG. Others had only a very few, a couple only had maybe a half dozen or so. Other then the calves faces from spilled milk, the calves fly load pretty much matched the fly load of the cow. I'm giving some thought to using fly load as another final decision point when it comes to retaining heifers. Of course Pedro didn;t have any flys on him but maybe that comes from sniffing pee and being so active checking out the ladys.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dun, post: 412707, member: 34"] We've fed loose mineral with IGR or Rabon for years, seems to help. hen I mopved the cows this morning I saw that they were out of minerals, had kind of expected it since they were in the same pasture a couple of days longer then I thought they would be, plus the fly wipe wass out of juice. Apparantly had been for a couple of days. I noticed as the cows went by that some had a pretty good number of flys, 100 or so, but that's a SWAG. Others had only a very few, a couple only had maybe a half dozen or so. Other then the calves faces from spilled milk, the calves fly load pretty much matched the fly load of the cow. I'm giving some thought to using fly load as another final decision point when it comes to retaining heifers. Of course Pedro didn;t have any flys on him but maybe that comes from sniffing pee and being so active checking out the ladys. [/QUOTE]
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