A26-Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 25, 2000 DHIA Service Center, Orchard Road, University Park, PA 16802 Dairyman to Dairyman Question: This past spring we made a change to our dry cow program by increasing the con centrate level in the ration. We have better forages now and wonder if this practice should be continued. How can we tell if this change made any differ ence? The impact of management decisions and changes are often hard to evaluate. I usually urge the dairymen that I work with to • Dump Truck Loads • Spreaders Available Rohrer’s Quality Hi-Cal Damp Lime 88% CCE ENP67 55% 65% 98% NOW ONLY $4.50 Per Ton (Picked Up) jflPl RUSHED STONE & READY-MIX Registered with PA Department of Agriculture develop strategies to measure desired results. Without doing so we sit back and are faced with this type of question. First I believe we should revi sit the circumstances at the time of this change. Lower quality forages were available for the dry cows and body condition was lost during the dry cow period as a result. Normal con centrate levels are 1 to 1.5- pounds. This body weight loss Calcium Oxide 41% Magnesium Oxide 6% Passing 100 Mesh Passing 60 Mesh Passing 20 Mesh Lititz, PA • (717) 626-9760 RETE ★ :ON created problems after the cows freshened, as smaller body reserves were available to tap during early lactation. Thin cows became the rule and lower milk yields were evident. Clini cal cases of ketosis were rare, but the veterinarian suspected sub-clinical ketosis. Health records are not readily available, but the herd is on DHIA test. We should look at the early lactation cows for this time frame and then compare to cows in early lactation now. This frequency graph looks at the 20 freshest cows as of Sep tember 1999 and shows the level of production that made up an overall average of 66.5# milk for these cows. I used September figures so that we can compare cows fresh at the same time of year to minimize environmental influence. The following is the result of the September 2000 test. Both graphs look at cows the same age, lactation number, and days in lactation in an effort to compare apples to apples. We use these pictures to show us the probable impact of a man agement change. What is signifi cant here is that these similar cows have all benefited by the The Valby chippers are mounted on the three-point hitch of farm tractors This enables easy transport and maneuvering in woodlots The Valby chippers produce uniform chips which can be sold for burning, animal bedding, landscaping, pulp or mulch The chippers can handle residue from logging, land clearing, and gardening as well as slabs and edgings The chippers are self-feeding Model Max Capacity HP Range CH 140 41/2”diam. 17-40 CHISO 6" diam. 20-50 CH 250 10” diam Sawmill chipper with pulley CH 250 OEM 18” wide slabs Hydraulically powered chipper for skid-steer mounting. CHI4OHMD 6” diam Agricultural Generators •'V-'PSf N. Spectrum Detroit Diesel *% MAI&tS&HT P.T.O. L.P. Gas, Diesel, jenerators Natural Gas Generators'' 25 to 135 KW Units 5 to 2,000 KW In Stock! Service - Rental - New & Used Units In Stock w^M.jnmJWsygrEMs Power Generation Systems Specialists Call Leonard Martin change of concentrate in the dry cow ration. The range of pro duction stayed the same but has moved up by 10-pounds. Sep tember 1999 range for milk pro duction of fresh cows was 30 to 100 and now that range is 40 to 110. We also note that the aver age production increased from 66.5 to 80.5, which tells us that the majority of cows have im proved more than 10-pounds. My theory on dry cows is that we need to maintain a certain ability to digest grains as well as maintain body condition. Most situations will need around five pounds of grain to accomplish this. The cows here have re sponded well to changes while they were dry. Improved per formance during early lactation is evident and I would hesitate to go back to minimal concen trate levels. Average Farm Feed Costs for Handy Reference To help farmers across the state to have handy reference of commodity input costs in their feeding operations for DHIA record sheets or to develop livestock feed cost data, here’s last week’s average costs of various ingred- ALBV DISK IPPERS 40+ Min. 23 gpm@ 2000 psi oil flow 330 Fonderwhite Road, Lebanon, PA 17042 Changes arc inevitable on dairies. When we make manage ment decisions we should ac company them with a way to measure the impact. DHIA records are the heart and soul of that measuring process. Some times we can even enhance normal DHIA records with the use of a computer and software, such as Bam Owl 2000, which I used in the above graphics. rents as compiled from regional reports across the state of Pennsylvania. Corn, No.2y —1.95 bu., 3.49 cwt. Wheat, N 0.2 2.18 bu., 3.64 cwt. Barley, N 0.3 —1.37 bu., 2.93 cwt. Oats, N 0.2—1.30 bu., 4.06 cwt. Soybeans, No.l 4.19 bu., 6.99 cwt. Ear C0rn—57.33 ton, 2.87 cwt. 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