Emergency confinement feeding after a disaster

Emergency confinement feeding after a disaster

Recently, over 8,000 acres of native range burned in the Nebraska Sandhills. These types of disasters often leave producers in a forage shortage for the summer. Confining pairs to keep them off the recovering burned areas may be an option for some producers and does not have to occur in a feedlot.

Alternative locations for confinement feeding pairs can be a pivot corner, fallow ground, or as a last resort, a sacrifice area such as a calving lot. There are several things producers need to keep in mind if pairs have to be maintained in confinement.

Items to keep in mind

Feed bunks are not necessary to feed pairs in confinement. A hot fence can be strung along the edge of a pivot corner or fallow field and feed can be delivered just across the wire, thereby reducing the amount of feed the cattle waste by soiling or lying on the feed. The important point is to have adequate feeding space (2 ft. per cow and 1 ¬Ω feet for the calf) - especially if the pairs are limit fed an energy-dense diet. Pairs should also have 350-400 ft2 of pen space as well.

Lactating pairs with calves require a diet much higher in TDN than gestating cows which are the cows most producers are most familiar with feeding in a semi-confinement situation. For example, a 1200 lb cow in late gestation requires 9-11 lb of TDN per day whereas her lactating counterpart requires 15-16 lb TDN per day (60-80 days postpartum). A nursing calf begins consuming 1% of its body weight in forage before it is 3 months of age and will need to be accounted for as well. For more information on the nutrient requirements of cows see NebGuide 2268 Supplementation Needs for Gestating and Lactating Beef Cows and Comparing the Prices of Supplement Sources (PDF version 976KB). For help balancing a diet for confined cows contact a Nebraska Extension Beef Educator or a Beef Specialist.

Another consideration is access to water. This is especially true for young calves. Nursing calves need water not only for hydration, but also for rumen development. If pairs are moved somewhere calves are not normally housed, make sure they can reach the water source. They need to be able to reach the edge of the tank, but also, the tank must be large enough (or the flow of the pipe refilling the tank unrestricted enough) that cows do not drink the tank down below the level the calves can reach.

Confinement feeding cows can be a way to maintain the cow herd while providing much needed recovery time for damaged rangelands. Additional information on confinement feeding cows can be found in NebGuide G2237 Management Considerations for Beef Cows in Confinement (PDF version 667KB).

 

Latest News

The Pros and Cons of Multispecies Grazing
The Pros and Cons of Multispecies Grazing

Kevin Lynch shares the pros and cons of multispecies grazing as well as what beginners need to consider in Season 7, Episode 16 of the Casual Cattle Conversations podcast.

Moving Into the Next Stage of Panhandle Wildfire Recovery
Moving Into the Next Stage of Panhandle Wildfire Recovery

Donation intake closing as distribution continues for AgriLife Extension-operated Animal Supply Points.

CAB Insider: Prime Pops for Annual Quality Peak
CAB Insider: Prime Pops for Annual Quality Peak

Over the past five weeks the combined Prime and Choice carcasses harvested totaled 84.7%, a six percentage point increase over the September low of 78.7%.

Goodbye, El Niño. Hello, La Niña? The Big Transition to La Niña is Already Underway
Goodbye, El Niño. Hello, La Niña? The Big Transition to La Niña is Already Underway

There's now a 60% chance La Niña will develop between June and August and an 85% chance it's in effect by November 2024 to January 2025, according to NOAA.

John Deere Dream Job: Brock Purdy Leads Chief Tractor Officer Search
John Deere Dream Job: Brock Purdy Leads Chief Tractor Officer Search

John Deere is seeking its first ever Chief Tractor Officer with a little help from a new friend - 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy.

Profit Tracker: Major Shift in Feed Costs Boosts Livestock Margins
Profit Tracker: Major Shift in Feed Costs Boosts Livestock Margins

Cattle and hog feeders are benefitting from dramatically lower grain and feed costs this year while live animal sale prices are higher. Profit margins for both species have doubled in the past month.