AlHancaater Farming, Saturday, December 28, 1996 That's right, feed your dairy herd our remarkable new Full Time" forage, and within a week, you could see results like those at Michigan State University (MSU) Cows fed Cargill's new FuHTime forage hybrids on average consumed 8 percent more dry A Forage Like This Only Comes Around Once In A Blue Moon. There are at least two ways fiber digestibility can improve a cow's performance One, by increasing the energy density of its diet, and the other, by increasing dry-matter intake. It's these two components working together that explain the remarkable test results with Full Time forage. You see, our new line of Full Time forages contain up to 40 percent less indigestible lignin than traditional hybrids. This means that Full Time forage rates higher in fiber digestibility. That, in turn, contributes to the INTRODUCING FULLTIM A REVOLUTIONARY NEW FEI CAN TURN YOUR HERD INTO matter, resulting in 5.5 more pounds of milk per cow per day while showing improved body condition increase in dry-matter intake of nearly 4/4 pounds per cow per day in the MSU trial. By digesting fiber more rapidly and more com- pletely, cows can move feed out of the rumen more quickly and make room'for more feed. This translates into more energy for milk production in an optimally balanced ration and is what makes Full Time forage a nutritional breakthrough issues related to hay crops. Or balance grain yield over forage quality like you do with other hybrids. With Full Time forage you get high-fiber digestibility, low lignin, improved dry-matter intake, better cow performance, and perhaps best of all, a harvest that's only once a year, ONLY A C 130 YBARS COULD O FROM YOUR A Better Forage All The Way Around. No longer do you have to deal with the timing or weather * 4 ,l'* 1 * * W feeding silage m can have a signifi cant effect on a dairy farm's profit- ability. Even after accounting for the costs of higher d r y matter intake, the aver age response of 5.5 pounds of miff per cow per day priced at M cents per pounc exceeds $l5O pel cow per lactation