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protien tubs
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<blockquote data-quote="hillsdown" data-source="post: 712996" data-attributes="member: 5106"><p>HS a nutritionists advice is free BTW. Have you never had your feed analyzed ? :???: </p><p></p><p>ALX in a good year I would say they are a waste of money, but in a feed crisis it will be a necessity. My cattle tell me what they need by their condition and coat. I feed accordingly. My cows calving the first of the year and a feed crisis could be interesting to say the least, I am going to have to be right on top of my game. </p><p>The replacement heifers will have access to the creep feed and will be fed the lowest quality of feed with a new mineral (I haven't picked it up yet) that was suggested to me from my nutritionist.</p><p></p><p>The dry cows will have to eat straw and grain plus very low quality feed as well and will have access to the protein tubs, I am using the same minerals that I use with my flush cows and recips.</p><p></p><p>The fresh cows will get a combination of straw, good quality hay , grain and protein tubs for when they feel they need it. The calves will have creep hay and calf starter. I will also provide the same minerals that I used last year for fresh cows.</p><p></p><p>What I am doing is done often but not usually with a herd that calves so early in the year and could face some very extreme temps.</p><p></p><p>Like I said it will be a whole different game this year, hay to buy is not an option, there isn't any around this year and although many have said there would be a lot of cereal hay there isn't any . The green feed around was cut far too late to be of any value more than straw and the price they want for it is the same as hay 80-100 $'s a 1000 lb bale plus shipping... I have already stripped my herd down to the bare minimum ,so I need to be very creative this calving season..</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hillsdown, post: 712996, member: 5106"] HS a nutritionists advice is free BTW. Have you never had your feed analyzed ? :???: ALX in a good year I would say they are a waste of money, but in a feed crisis it will be a necessity. My cattle tell me what they need by their condition and coat. I feed accordingly. My cows calving the first of the year and a feed crisis could be interesting to say the least, I am going to have to be right on top of my game. The replacement heifers will have access to the creep feed and will be fed the lowest quality of feed with a new mineral (I haven't picked it up yet) that was suggested to me from my nutritionist. The dry cows will have to eat straw and grain plus very low quality feed as well and will have access to the protein tubs, I am using the same minerals that I use with my flush cows and recips. The fresh cows will get a combination of straw, good quality hay , grain and protein tubs for when they feel they need it. The calves will have creep hay and calf starter. I will also provide the same minerals that I used last year for fresh cows. What I am doing is done often but not usually with a herd that calves so early in the year and could face some very extreme temps. Like I said it will be a whole different game this year, hay to buy is not an option, there isn't any around this year and although many have said there would be a lot of cereal hay there isn't any . The green feed around was cut far too late to be of any value more than straw and the price they want for it is the same as hay 80-100 $'s a 1000 lb bale plus shipping... I have already stripped my herd down to the bare minimum ,so I need to be very creative this calving season.. [/QUOTE]
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