58 —Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 4,1978 Fine timing (Continued from Page 56) Fox recommends that silage be treated in some way to assure even levels of protein and also to help preserve the feed. Even with NPN treated silage, it remains important to feed some soybean meal with it, Fox recommends. He suggests a half to three quarters of a pound per day per head. The ideal range to treat silage, according to Fox, is at 30 to 35 per cent dry matter. It’s not recom mended that farmers at tempt treatment when the silage tests above 40 per cent dry matter. Making sure that protein and mineral levels are adequate for fed cattle is one of the most critical areas of production, Fox em phasized. Some other methods cattlemen can consider to achieve their protein goals is to add urea and minerals to their feed. It’ll improve feed efficiency by about three per cent, Fox’s statistics showed. Adding cold-flow anhydrous ammonia took three per cent more feed to equal the standard set by soybean meal and silage. Urea has been proven more efficient due to its increased effect on lactic acid production. A high silage ration, ef ficient as it may be, is not necessarily the most profitable When com is cheap, the statistics change, obviously. When corn is comparatively expensive, the idea of com silage and soybean meal becomes more lucrative. No mater what the feeding program, feed costs go up “by tremendous amounts” as cattle get fatter. That's why everyone is recom mending these days that producers whatch their weights and grades closely. Cattle are to go to market at grade, not over-fattened. Fox revealed that hay is not necessarily beneficial in getting feeder cattle started on com silage. Cattle gain slower on hay, he said, and even if they’re slow on silage at first, they’ll catch up due to silage’s higher energy content. The benefit of hay feeding is that it will encourage the more timid individuals to come up to the feed bunk, he admitted. Nevertheless, the Cornell researcher says a cattle feeder can take his animals right off the truck and put them on silage. “They’ll get accustomed to it, and when they do, they’ll really take off,” he assures. He also reminded his audience not be too concerned about their cattle not eating too much at first. Given the cir cumstances that some of those cattle had to go through to reach the farm, they can’t be blamed for not “stuffing themselves” to start with. “If you were chased around, penned up, trucked around, and felt miserable as a result of it, you wouldn’t eat too much either,” he explained. Fox also noted that a hay and gram ration is better initially, if that’s what a feeder chooses to work with. Such a ration, however, is not recommended afterjour to six weeks. In either case, a switch to silage could mean a period of lost if ficiency since the cattle aren't accustomed to such a diet. Some other feeds and feeding tips Fox offered include: Adding corn to com silage isn’t worth the cost, and intake stimulants haven’t been proven wor thwhile. Concluding his presen tation, Fox urged his audience to pay attention to the little tilings in their management. It can add up to a difference of $l3B per steer. According to research done at several universities, the details to watch for and manage correctly are: the environment in which you cattle are raised - clean, healthy surroundings are conducive to growthier cattle; healthy cattle at the start give you an advantage right from the beginning - buy only good quality cattle to mixumze returns. Feed intake, a balanced ration, a digestive stimulant, a metabolic stimulant, and sale condition are other Hog indentification required HARRISBURG - Sows and boars over six months old that are shipped across state lines for slaughter will have to have identifying tattoos or tags starting March 23. F.J. Mulhern, administrator of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, said the I.D. mark will make it possible to trace he animals back to herd of origin if brucellosis is found. Another new requirement is that when such animals are transported across state lines fro breeding purposes they must first be tested for brucellosis. factors whichfare to the loss or gdn a cattleman has at his disposal. “The little things add up, they’re very important, Fox concluded. 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