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Rail: 290.00 (NE)

US Trade - Heifers

Live: 185.00 (NE, TX, KN)
Rail: 290.00 (NE)

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July 10, 2024 Health & Production

Clipping or swathing early maturing pastures

ABP is excited to feature the writings of Barry Yaremcio, ruminant nutritionist and production management consultant. Barry is a trusted voice in cattle nutrition and forage production, operating Yaremcio Ag Consulting Ltd. This article was originally published on his BYOB Blog, which can be found on his website.

Plants are heading out earlier than normal this year. This includes most areas that were dry for several years and continue to be dry. Early heading grasses are also occurring in areas that have received moisture this spring. This is a stress response to previous and current weather conditions.

 Plants grow and mature to accomplish one task. To produce a seed crop that is needed to replenish plant populations to keep the stand strong and viable. Grazing cattle on pasture creates stress on plants. The plants must overcome this stress to survive.

 When the head emerges from the boot and it is pollinated, seeds are formed. The seeds mature and the lifecycle of that plant is completed for the year. Additional growth is minimal. For grasses, short vegetative tillers develop at the crown which are needed to establish potential for next year’s growth. In years of drought, plants can mature 2 to 4 weeks sooner than normal.

 When forage supply exceeds what grazing animals can consume, seed heads emerge, and the plants change from a vegetative stage to a reproductive stage. Quality declines as the plant matures.

 Action is needed to prevent the plants from developing seed and going into dormancy.

A short intense grazing (mob grazing) to clip or remove the top of the plants including seed heads is one option. A good rotational grazing plan should keep the plants in a vegetative stage. If growth is too rapid, use a swather, hay bine, or deck mower to remove the seed heads from short plants. In paddocks where plants are taller, consider taking an early cut of hay.

 By removing the existing seed heads, the plant is forced to develop new tillers and to develop seed. The new growth is high quality, immature forage, no different than the initial spring growth. This increases the total amount of forage available to graze over the summer.

About the Author

Barry was raised on a mixed farm in northeastern Alberta. He completed a Bachelors degree in Agriculture specializing in Animal Science from the University of Alberta in 1984. Since then he's worked as an agriculturalist, laboratory nutritionist, and Provincial Beef Nutritionist, among other roles. In 2009 Barry completed a Master’s Degree in Animal Science (nutrition), evaluating the amount of feed waste by various feed delivery systems and the impact it had on the quality of feed consumed.

Today, Barry is an independent ruminant nutritionist and production management consultant for Yaremcio Ag Consulting Ltd. You can contact Barry, and read all of his blog articles like this one at www.beefconsultant.com.

Cattle Report

Updated: 15/11/2024

Steers

Live: ---
Rail: 405.00 del

Heifers

Live: ---
Rail: 405.00 del

Choice Steers

Live: 185.00 (NE, TX, KN)
Rail: 290.00 (NE)

Choice Heifers

Live: 185.00 (NE, TX, KN)
Rail: 290.00 (NE)

Boner Cows

Over 500 lbs: 232.14

Canadian Dollar

$71.04   0.27

Livestock Price Insurance Index

Expiry Fed Feeder Calf
27-Jan-25 238 324 --
24-Feb-25 236 320 --
24-Mar-25 236 320 --
21-Apr-25 242 322 --
19-May-25 246 324 --
16-Jun-25 250 324 --
14-Jun-25 238 -- --
Last Updated on November 1, 2024

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