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Problems Per Head?
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<blockquote data-quote="preston39" data-source="post: 93504" data-attributes="member: 1487"><p>=======</p><p></p><p>Jeanne,</p><p></p><p>Your opinion suggest that your hay is more nutritional than your summer pasture...since you feed no dry grain. Is that a fair conclusion of your remarks?</p><p></p><p>..."winter is a known factor in birth weights. The colder/harsher the winter - the larger the calves - the larger the calves - the more POTENTIAL calving difficulties".</p><p></p><p>I have heard this but, never seen a study. Do you have a reference for review? I have seen a study which suggest calf size is related too to much grain being fed in the cold months....but haven't seen anything which suggests straight hay produces the same condition.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="preston39, post: 93504, member: 1487"] ======= Jeanne, Your opinion suggest that your hay is more nutritional than your summer pasture...since you feed no dry grain. Is that a fair conclusion of your remarks? ..."winter is a known factor in birth weights. The colder/harsher the winter - the larger the calves - the larger the calves - the more POTENTIAL calving difficulties". I have heard this but, never seen a study. Do you have a reference for review? I have seen a study which suggest calf size is related too to much grain being fed in the cold months....but haven't seen anything which suggests straight hay produces the same condition. [/QUOTE]
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