Dairy profits * By SALLY BAER Staff correspondent LANCASTER - Over :onditioned heifers will do nore damage to your dairy ierd than heifers which are CUSTOM BUILT Dl PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW FOR THIS NEW 20 & 24 BLADE PULL TYPE ELIAS $. BEELER FARM slightly under-conditioned, according to Donald Ace, Extension dairy specialist with the Pennsylvania State University. Ace cautioned farmers not SEE ON DISPLAY AT R. 1, Leola, PA 17540 Musser School Rd. MYER’S METERED GAS SERVICE, INC. SERVING FARMERS... “WE MAKE IT OUR BUSINESS” A begin with heifer management to get heifers over conditioned because it is an “irreversible” condition. He said, “The fat is laid down in the system long before you can see it and will result in a lack of milk production and poor breeding per formance.” Speaking to dairymen at a meeting sponsored by the Lancaster County Agricultural Extension Service, Ace discussed feeding programs for ob taining healthy herd replacements, but said that raising healthy heifers requires correct handling of the dam before the calf is dropped. Ace said this includes proper care of the maternity area, but added, “This does not mean that it needs to be cleaned out after each cow calves. It can be cleaned after every three or four cows, but just before freshening fresh straw should be added to Insulate from the previous manure pack.” Ace called the manure pack the “greatest incubator in the world” because it profides heat, food and moisture to organisms which can create a lot of problems for newborn calves. “Wetness is a killer,” he noted, saying that proper P.O. BOX 71 MANHEIM, PA 17545 717-665-3588 { ' ' /*r\ * Don Ace ventiliation and a dry calving area are of utmost importance to healthy calves. The first step when a calf is bom should be to feed it colostrum. “Get colostrum in its gut just as quick as you can,” Ace told the dairymen. “It is wonderful if you can get it in in the first 15 minutes. If you don’t get four to six pounds fed inside of the first four hours, you’ve lost fifty per cent of the battle. “Don’t throw any of the first milk away - it has twice the solids, twice the vitamins and twice the fats, as well as all the antibodies. A calf is bom without a shred of resistance to disease so you must give it to them.” Ace recommends that all the first colostrum be saved and fed in subsequent feedings before going on to the second milking. He said further that every dairyman should have a feeding or two of colostrum stored for use when needed. He said it is extremely important to get the colostrum m the gut before other things get m first - like the sawdust which is sometimes used for bedding newborn calves. The quantity of colostrum is important. If sour colostrum is being used, Ace suggested diluting it two to one, saying that the original recommendations for a one to one dilution does not offer enough nutrients to keep the calf going. If you have a lot of colostrum, it is Garber Oil Co. (texaco] Fuel Chief HEATING OIL t OIL HEATING EQUIPMENT AIR CONDITIONING MOUNT JOY, PA Ph. 653-1821 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 4,1978 alright to dilute it three to one. If milk replacer is what you’re using, Ace said it is perfectly acceptable to use a “dairy type” replacement if the calves are healthy. However, “If you have a problem with calves, you should move up a grade or two,” The protein level should be between 20 and 28 per cent, and if it is vegetable protein it should be 22 per cent If the crude fiber content is more than one half of a per cent, the replacer is of inferior or lesser quality, he said. h. H m In questioning following the program Ace acknowledged that in general there is no problem with feeding mastitic milk to calves, “However, up until three days of age, don’t feed it.” Ace said samtation in calf feeding should not be overlooked. “Calf' feeding utensils should go through the same washing as the milking utensils and should be sanitized the same as the milking utensils.” He said parasite problems are a result of sanitation and of management and said the cycle must be broken to cure the problem. Ensiled forages should not be fed during the first four months, Ace said. “Stay away from com silage and high moisture grains. If you feed a lot of silage the calf won’t get the energy it needs. After four months, if the calf is on a good dry gram ration, then it is okay to start forages.” During the first four months, Ace said calves should be fed all the high quality hay they will eat. At a year they can be fed hay of lesser quality as long as they are getting gram for energy and protem. Ace said that farm grown grains are fine for feeding heifers as long as they are “put together right.” He added, “I don’t want urea in a calf ration under four months. Urea must be used m a healthy gut - don’t rush it.” From six months to one year, a small amount can be put in the ration, up to one and one half per cent if it is also used in the milking ration to get heifers used to it. Ace said there should be Ladies promote peaches MARTINSBURG, W.Va. - National Peach Partners will launch their newly organized organization at the 37th Annual Convention and Trade Show of National Peach Council February 26 - 14-16 per cent protein in the ration if legumes are being fed. If mostly grasses are being fed with some com silage, the per cent should be 16-18 per cent, and not over 20 per cent. Ace recom mended that if a lot of alfalfa is being used, the calcium intake should be reduced and the phosphorous intake increased. The age of weaning depends upon how well the calf is eating hay and grain. However, Ace cautioned that sometimes calves are so overfed with milk replacer that they’re not hungry for anything else. He said calves should be eating 1-1% pounds of grain at weaning age, along with a good feeding of hay. The overall feed ration program is important to having animals in the proper condition as they approach breeding age. Ace said that controlled research programs have shown that thin animals can catch up with proper feeding. Problems with fat animals, however, contmue through life, and one of the most costly can be breeding. Ace cited studies which show that fat animals have a 25 per cent lower conception rate than heifers with proper conditioning. Ace said it is ideal to plan to have heifers freshen at 23 to 24 months, but no later than 27 months. While there is talk about calving at 21 months, Ace said this could result in more calving problems, especially among over-conditioned animals. On the other hand, if animals do not freshen by 30 months or over, Ace said, “You are feeding a lot of animals which should be producing milk.” “If a heifer is cycling normally, she should be bred at 13 to 15 months, so she will calve and get in the milking string.” If she needs to be held back, it can be done after she is a strong producer, Ace said. “Sometimes heifers will quit cycling, and production is lost if you wait too long. ’ ’ As heifers approach freshening, Ace said they should be pulled from the other heifers and worked mto the dry cow feeding program so they get used to the ration. March 1 in San Antonio, Texas. Early arrivals with their husbands will be welcome to plan the show and tell portion of the program illustrating ways in which the nation’s peach partners promote the Queen of Fruits back home. Meetings will be posted for the Hilton Palacio del Rio and San Antonio Convention Center. Members will also be manning a booth in the exhibit hall offering peach crewel kits, peach prose stationery notes, check fold covers, and possible a new dressy T-shirt with the “PEACHES” message Peach craft items would be welcomed. Contact National Peach Council, P 0 Box 1085, Martinsburg, West Virginia 25401, or call 304- 267-6024 for more in- 107