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Page 1: Feeding Cattle Without the Feedlot

Feeding Without the Feedlot

Jason GrossUNL ExtensionBiological System Engineering

Page 2: Feeding Cattle Without the Feedlot

Feed Calves without the Feedlot

• Reduce costs and infrastructure by not building pens, bunks, and waste treatment facilities.

• Reduce costs by eliminating baling, hauling, grinding, and manually spreading manure.

• Reduce mortality and sickness by keeping the cattle out of muddy or dusty conditions.

• Increase cattle numbers without expanding existing feeding facilities.

• Reduce environmental risk by having a grazing operation instead of an AFO or CAFO by having the livestock naturally spread their manure.

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To Have All the Comforts of a Feedlot but Without the Feedlot We Will Have To …

• House the cows or calves using permanent or temporary fencing.

• Use modern cross-fencing materials (polywire, step-in posts, TumblewheelTM, A-Post, or Pivot Fence) can control calf forage intake.

• Provide a more dust and mud free environment than an open lot.

• Be able to leave residue for erosion control.

• Achieve grazing efficiency in windrow grazing up to 90%.

• Minimize labor costs.

• Rely on UNL research illustrates the advantages of forage based grazing.

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UNL Research Shows the Efficiency of Windrow Grazing

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The Pivot Fence • Developed by UNL Extension to convert a center pivot into a

moveable cross-fence• Achieve the advantages of windrow grazing by only giving the

cattle a daily supply of forage to graze.• Move a quarter mile or longer fence in minutes by the push of

a button or with GPS and wireless control, the fence can be moved by cell phone or laptop anywhere in the world.

• Have a portable fence without manually picking up and moving wire and posts.

• Simple and easy to install and remove.• No alterations to the pivot (drilling or welding).• Can be used on all makes and models of pivot.• Works on frozen soils.

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Pivot Fence Components

• Truss Rod Hangers

• Drive Pipe Clamps

• Automatic Wire Tension System

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Truss Rod Hanger

Stabilizes Wire Height In Between Towers

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Wire Clamp for Pivot Tower Brace Pipe with an Insulator

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Automatic Wire Tension System

Adjusts Automatically or Manually

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Grazing Trials• Two trials in 2011, one fall oats and one cows

on corn stalks.

• Two trials in 2012, one fall oats and another with feeder calves on corn stalks.

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2011 Fall Oats• Oats planted in irrigated wheat stubble on August

8th (south half) and August 12th (north half)• South half yield – 2.76 ton/ac dry matter• Cost - $25.09 per ton dry matter• North half yield – 2.05 ton/ac dry matter • Cost - $40.67 per ton dry matter• Quality –

October 2011 – CP 8.5%, TDN 70.4%

January 2012 – CP 6.0%, TDN 59.5%

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South Half• 328 feeder calves grazed for 53 days• Calves grazed oats and volunteer wheat as a green

crop or standing up.• Calves grazed 47% of crop• Cost - $53.74 per ton grazed of dry matter• Cost - $0.36 per head per day (land cost not

included)• Forage intake 13.46 lb/ hd/ day• Fence moved every 3 days.

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Standing Forage

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North Half• 328 feeder calves grazed for 52 days• Forage was windrowed on November 22• Calves grazed 83% of the crop• Cost - $40.67 per ton grazed of dry matter• Cost - $0.39 per head per day (land cost not

included) • Forage intake 15.91 lb / hd / day• Fence moved every 2 days

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Manage Forage Intake and Residue

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Manure is already spread!

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2012 Fall Oats• Planted on August 1st

• Yield – 1.79 ton / ac

• Producer did not windrow. Grazed standing up.

• Grazing utilization averaged 67%

• Waiting for production costs.

• Moved fence every 2 days

• Quality –

October 2012 - CP 8.4%, TDN 75.5%

January 2013 - CP 8.2%, TDN 73.5%

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Calves Grazing Fall Oat after Irrigated Wheat

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Corn Stalk Grazing 2011 & 2012• Pivot Fence was used to demonstrate the

ability of the cross fence to limit grain intake.

• Limiting the daily intake to prevent founder and to stretch the downed grain to reduce protein supplement.

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Corn Stalk 2011• 90 cows on 130 acres of irrigated corn.

• Start Dec 2nd and ended on March 6th.

• Moved cross fence 10 times.

• Maintained cows grazing grain up to March 6th.

• With enough of a daily intake of grain the cows didn’t need protein supplement during this time.

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Corn Stalk 2012• 750 head of 600 lb feeder steers.

• Irrigated corn 130 acres with 40 bu/ac of downed corn.

• Start November 27th

• Pivot Fence cross fencing started out well but when the pivot moved into some extremely rough ground, the producer gave up on maintaining the fence in the first of January.

• The fence proved its worth but showed its limits on extremely rough ground.

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What Did We Learn• We can successfully house cows or calves with portable fencing on

forages.

• If the forage is hayed properly and allowed to cure in the windrow, the feed quality can remain though out the winter.

• Forage loss usually was where the windrow touches the soil. Minimize the number of windrows by raking.

• Give daily rations to minimize over consumption.

• Intake improves with dry windrows.

• Manure is naturally spread.

• Introduce calves to grazing system in small groups to keep them settled down.

• Daily interaction from producer improves calf disposition and behavior.

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Question’s ?

Jason GrossBiological Systems EngineeringUNL Extension

(308) 865 – [email protected]


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