Waiting for Spring !!

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Strategies Developed for More Efficient Beef Cattle Production
By Sharon Durham
January 19, 2011
Reducing the amount of feed given to young female cows called heifers can result in more efficient use of nutrients for growth and reproduction, according to studies conducted by U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists.

Agricultural Research Service (ARS) animal scientist Andrew Roberts and his colleagues at the Fort Keogh Livestock and Range Research Laboratory in Miles City, Mont., found that the heifers they fed to lower target weights than those traditionally recommended consumed 27 percent less feed over the winter months, and gained weight more efficiently throughout the postweaning period and subsequent grazing season. ARS is USDA's principal intramural scientific research agency.

According to Roberts, this strategy of providing less feed may reduce costs of developing each replacement heifer by more than $31 and extend their lifespan, with important ramifications for lifetime efficiency and profitability. Feed represents 50 to 55 percent of total costs of developing replacement heifers.

In their study, begun in 2001, heifers were divided into two lifetime treatment groups: The control group was fed according to industry guidelines, and the restricted group was fed (on a body-weight basis) 80 percent of feed consumed by their control counterparts for 140 days, ending when they were 1 year old. The restricted heifers grew slower and weighed less at any point in time as a consequence of less feed. Final pregnancy rates were 87 percent for restricted heifers and 91 percent for controls.

According to Roberts, restricting feed allows nature to decide which heifers were reproductively efficient: Less efficient heifers would eventually fail to reproduce and be culled if restricted, whereas feeding more would keep them in production but result in more expense for the producer.

Read more about this research in the January 2011 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.

http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/pr/2011/110119.htm
 
FOR SALE: Snow-cheap.... You haul its free...

Spent all morning digging out AGAIN...Running out of room to pile this stuff...Predicting 3-6 inches again tonight and tomorrow...

But the weather folks say we are on a record breaking pace:

.CLIMATE...
THE 2010-11 SNOWFALL SEASON IN GLASGOW CONTINUES AT A RECORD
PACE.
LAST EVENINGS SNOWFALL OF 0.8 INCH BROUGHT THE SEASON
SNOWFALL TOTAL TO 62.5 INCHES. THE RECORD SEASONS SNOWFALL WAS
70.7 INCHES IN 2003-04. WITH 10 DAYS STILL LEFT IN JANUARY...JAN
2011 IS ALREADY THE 5TH SNOWIEST JANUARY ON RECORD WITH A TOTAL OF
24.0 INCHES OF SNOW. THE SNOWIEST JANUARY EVER WAS 32.9 INCHES IN
2004. WE HAVE HAD 13 DAYS OF THE FIRST 20 DAYS WITH MEASURABLE
SNOW
. JANUARY 1971 HAD THE MONTHLY RECORD FOR THAT WITH 20 DAYS
MEASURABLE FOR THE WHOLE MONTH.

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With the sun shining- and temp hitting 33 I wanted to get out the 4 wheeler that I have garaged in the old bunk house...Took a little shoveling with the scoop shovel to get into it..
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Our road just waiting for another blow to sock us in tight..
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One of the old cows taking advantage out of the trail to the water tank we plowed out better for them!
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Well after the blizzard that hit us last night- you'd never know it was the same yard-- and it makes you feel like a days work was in vain... 4-5-6 inches of new snow (who knows its all in drifts)- and 25-40mph east winds can sure wipe out a lot of snow clearing fast...

Had to use a scoop shovel to get into the barn (one door had blown open in the night so had to shovel out a 2 foot drift IN the barn) and to the water tanks this morning....

Major portion of the Highways east of Havre/Billings line are emergency travel only- and the Sheriffs Office is advising no travel... Winds have gone down now-- but the snow is still falling :roll: :(
 

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