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Cattle bedding

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    #16
    Regarding bedding, like rkaiser, I've seen cows sleeping on the packed snow even this morning at -32. Seemed to be a bit stiff when getting up but not to stressed from what I could tell. That said,
    I haven't bedded the cows for years.

    Only the calves and the bulls get bedding. The biggest thing from my perspective is a belly full of feed to keep the fermentation going and wind protection.

    Regarding feeding, the boys at Lacombe Research Station did some work on feed wastage a few years ago. Their numbers were very tight and repeatable. They found feeding long feed on the snow resulted in a waste of 12% and when feeding shredded feed on the snow resulted in a waste of 19%. The effective protein loss being the quality that went into the cows mouth was a drop from 11% to 8% when shredded.
    That is huge and makes twine removal incidental.

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      #17
      Ruken, I don't know how tight their figures were but I questioned their methodology in that experiment. The processed into deep snow - most ranchers with any common sense would run their loader bucket along the ground first and clear a path to drop the feed on. That would reduce wastage substantially but I think that would have gone against the purpose of the experiment. Not justifying feeding with a processor because I don't use one.

      I find the cows are quite happy bedding on snow, as long as they can get out of the wind. I much prefer keeping a cow's haircoat dry and functioning rather than getting any tag attached to it by bedding. It helps if you have cows with coats instead of T-shirts though eh Randy?

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        #18
        An old cattle feeder told me when I startd that you cannot make money feeding calves unless they are well bedded. I've always followed that advice. Cows on my place, on the other hand do not get any bedding, no matter how cold it is. The deer and moose do not get any bedding and do okay. I just provide them with a wind break and feed, and they are fine. The cost of my home grown straw at approx. $65 /tonne due to fertilizer content, baling, fuel, wages, etc, so i feed it to them, I can't afford to have them waste it. I calve in the early summer.

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          #19
          We will occasionally bed cows if the
          weather is very cold, but generally
          speaking we don't. Bulls are bedded,
          simply because although they can take
          the weather, I can't afford to lose a
          $5000 set of nuts.
          Calves historically have been forage fed
          in a corral and bedded. This year we
          grazed and do not have calves near the
          corral. They have some bedding, but
          have not suffered unduly on most of the
          days when they chose not to bother
          coming back to their bed.
          We have often bedded with hay (which
          will seem insane to some people), but it
          is our cheapest bedding resource when we
          figure out purchase cost and trucking on
          straw.
          After this winter so far, I think it
          will be a long stretch before we are
          convinced to corral calves for the
          winter again...

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            #20
            forgot to mention...We don't bed on
            prairie, as I am not a fan of invasive
            species.

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              #21
              A neighbour does not bed his cows until they start to calve.

              Minus 43 degrees last year for a week, still no bedding. I don't agree with his policy. Up until his cows are calving they look like some neglected cattle out of sub-Saharan Africa. I try not to look as I drive by.

              My father treated his cattle with respect and believe me, not providing adequate bedding in extreme weather is ABUSE.

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