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<blockquote data-quote="SmallTimin" data-source="post: 1739026" data-attributes="member: 41623"><p>The traps that I precondition cattle in, I feed about 30 head at time. But any yearling that doesn't start gaining gets put in a different pen. I sort hard gainers and bottom Enders to be with their kind. This lets strong, big eating yearlings eat their fill, and it gives the weaker cattle a better chance to catch up. The only acidosis I've experienced is in pens that had a lot of Johnson grass during a dry spell. The Johnson grass makes good hay, but I don't like it to be grazed.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SmallTimin, post: 1739026, member: 41623"] The traps that I precondition cattle in, I feed about 30 head at time. But any yearling that doesn’t start gaining gets put in a different pen. I sort hard gainers and bottom Enders to be with their kind. This lets strong, big eating yearlings eat their fill, and it gives the weaker cattle a better chance to catch up. The only acidosis I’ve experienced is in pens that had a lot of Johnson grass during a dry spell. The Johnson grass makes good hay, but I don’t like it to be grazed. [/QUOTE]
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