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<blockquote data-quote="TexasBred" data-source="post: 657142" data-attributes="member: 6897"><p>No...the grass eaten earlier makes the milk. Starving or overloading the system when you cut rations or increase rapidly will change the milk production but "hours latter". Check your lab results and you'll also probably see a big shift in your milk components as well. Look at her as a fine tune engine. You can play with the fuel system all you want and it may increase speed but you'll suffer somewhere else. Dairy cattle especially need a constant food source as close as possible to the same every day and hopefully no big change in outside factors to maintain most constant milk flow. Weather can effect milk production as much as feed changes.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TexasBred, post: 657142, member: 6897"] No...the grass eaten earlier makes the milk. Starving or overloading the system when you cut rations or increase rapidly will change the milk production but "hours latter". Check your lab results and you'll also probably see a big shift in your milk components as well. Look at her as a fine tune engine. You can play with the fuel system all you want and it may increase speed but you'll suffer somewhere else. Dairy cattle especially need a constant food source as close as possible to the same every day and hopefully no big change in outside factors to maintain most constant milk flow. Weather can effect milk production as much as feed changes. [/QUOTE]
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