E34-L«ncMter Farming. Saturday, Auflmt 14,1W3 Livestock Notes HOW LONG DOES IT TAKE TO MILK A COW? R.R. Peters Extension Dairy Specialist U. Of Md. How many times have you read that most cows milk out in 3 to 5 minutes? One widely used tex tbook indicates that “The average cow when milked correctly requires about 5 minutes to milk.” These statements may have been true years ago but they are probab ly not true for high producing herds. A paper presented by Dr. Graeme Mein (University of Wis consin) at the 1993 annual meet ing of the National Mastitis Coun cil, indicated that the average milking time of 71 cows from 5 herds was 6.4 minutes. And 95% of cows milked out in an average of 6.9 minutes. These cows were in Minnesota and Wisconsin herds with a DHIA rolling herd average of 18,300 to 24,463 pounds. All herds used low-line parlor milk pipelines. System vacuum settings ranged from 12. S to 13.5 inches of mercury. Pulsation rates were 52 cycles per minute for four herds and 60 cycles per minute for one herd. Pulsation ratios ranged from 50 to 60% on front, and 55 to 60% on rear quarters. A linear regression equation was fitted to the data. The regres sion indicated that the minimum milking time was about 5.4 minutes per milking and that the average predicted milking time depended on the amount of milk produced (Table 1). Table 1. Relationship between pounds of milk produced per milking and predicted average minutes per milking. Pounds of Milk Produced Per Milking 15 25 37.5 50 Thus, based on this study of 5 high producing commercial dairy herds, milking required 5 to 10 minutes per cow. This helps explain why most milking parlors operate at “4 turns per hour.” That is, 4 groups of cows cycle through the parlor per hour. For example, if a dairy producer has a double-8 milking parlor with no automation and a high producing herd, one would predict that each side of the parlor would take about 7 minutes to milk plus .9 minute per cow (7.2 minutes) for the standard work routine time. When the milk ing time (7 minutes) and work routine time (7.2 minutes) are added together, this dairy produc er spends 14.2 minutes per group, and parlor throughout is 4.2 turns per hour. If the parlor has automa tic take-offs and rapid release gates, the work routine time may be reduced to .7 minutes per cow, and the turns per hoqr would increase to 4.8. REPRODUCTION AND WOOL PRODUCTION IN INBRED SHEEP Inbreeding in meat animal spe cies has been used with varying degrees of Success to concentrate desirable genes and to improve levels of performance of economi cally important trails. Inbreeding is beneficial when unrelated inbred lines are mated. The performance of the result ing progeny is superior to that of the non-inbred population from which the inbred lines were derived. However, widespread use of inbreeding has been limited by a decrease in reproductive fitness or reproductive performance in inbred lines compared with ran domly mated populations. To determine the effects of inbreeding on reproduction and wool production in sheep, scien tists in Idaho evaluated 54 inbred. Avg. Minutes Per Milking 5.4 6.6 8.1 9.6 DTKrC Aim ATiniTOQ Dim iSr MJf \ J ImMLI y . We Will Assemble & Deliver Bins To Your Farm one random-bred control, and equal to sire-daughter matings or three non-inbred control lines of , brother-sister, fuU-sib matings, jheep. " Body weight increased in every For at least nine years, records line; however, fleece weight on 19,438 dams and 23,625 lambs, tended to decline and the change from Rambouillet, Columbia, and was most evident in the two lines Targhee sheep were collected and developed by rapid inbreeding. As analyzed. Average inbreeding in inbreeding increased, the trend the inbred lines during the period was downward for total weaning was near 25 percent for iambs and weights of lambs at 120 days of 20 percent for ewes. These levels age and number of lambs weaned of inbreeding are approximately p6r ewe exposed to breeding. In STOP BY PENNSYLVANIA’S DAIRY PROMOTION PARTNERS BOOTH AND SEE HOW WE ARE WORKING TOGETHER TO PROMOTE YOUR PRODUCT. *f'. 1. Northeast Agri Systems, Inc, Flyway Business Park 139 A West Airport Road Lititz, PA 17543 * Ph: (717) 569-2702 1993 AG PROGRESS DAYS ACTIVITIES: ICE CREAM CHURN-OFF WEDNESDAY 1:00 p.m. ANTIQUE DAIRY DISPLAY ICE CREAM CONES & SUNDAES REGISTER TO WIN PRIZES DAILY PENNSYLVANIA 'S PROMOTION PARTNERS: AMERICAN DAIRY ASSOCIATION AND DAIRY COUNCIL MID-EAST U.D.LA./F.O. 36 FA DAIRY PROMOTION PROGRAM COMMITTED TO INCREASING THE ißr CONSUMPTION OF DAIRY PRODUCTS m Master Distributor STORE HOURS: Mon-Fd. 7:30 to 4:30 CC3 Sot. S:00 to Noon M Hr. 7 Day Rope* Sonde* gjj|| 1-800-673-2580 P M gS all cases except one, lamb produc tion was superior in the non inbred control group of each breed, compared with the inbred lines. Not one of the 54 inbred lines evaluated was superior to its respective non-inbred control line for the two most economically important traits, weight of lamb weaned and number of lambs weaned per ewe exposed to breed ing. Custom Applications