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How much urea is to much urea?
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<blockquote data-quote="faster horses" data-source="post: 1707140" data-attributes="member: 17524"><p>Phosphorus is a limiter as is salt. We had gumbo grass in a pasture. Cattle would not eat mineral in that pasture, same with the neighbors. They had gumbo too. We tested that gumbo grass. Guess what? High in phos, so of course they wouldn't eat mineral because they didn't need the phos while in that pasture. When we moved them and same with the neighbors, the cattle hit the mineral again and ate more than usual for awhile. They overate to get the copper stores up in their liver. I agree with OldScout. Real world vs. university studies. After all, what could go wrong in a university study? We work with people in the real world every day.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="faster horses, post: 1707140, member: 17524"] Phosphorus is a limiter as is salt. We had gumbo grass in a pasture. Cattle would not eat mineral in that pasture, same with the neighbors. They had gumbo too. We tested that gumbo grass. Guess what? High in phos, so of course they wouldn't eat mineral because they didn't need the phos while in that pasture. When we moved them and same with the neighbors, the cattle hit the mineral again and ate more than usual for awhile. They overate to get the copper stores up in their liver. I agree with OldScout. Real world vs. university studies. After all, what could go wrong in a university study? We work with people in the real world every day. [/QUOTE]
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How much urea is to much urea?
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