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The Rural Voice, 2000-08, Page 51Feeding poor quality forage in beef and sheep operations By Christopher Wand, Beef Cattle, Sheep and Goat Nutritionist and Beth Wheeler, Dairy Cattle Nutritionist Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs The cool wet conditions this spring have delayed hay crop harvest across the province. Delayed harvest and weathering damage reduces the nutrient and feeding value crops. it takes only five or six days to go from high quality forage to a more mature, less palatable and lower quality feed. You can't change the weather but you can change the rations, feeding and management to cope with quality differences. Here are some tips to help producers make the best out of a bad situation. Rations • Test all forages when they enter storage and have rations balanced before feed -out. Retest at feed -out and make alterations when ensiled feed analysis results are available. • Test for lignin to get a better handle on available energy. Test all hays and fermented silages for heat damage (ADF-N). Recheck soluble protein on ensiled feeds. • Save highest quality forages for early lactation females and growing livestock. • Consider feeding animals in multiple groups. Use poorer forages for the group with lower requirements. Feeding • Feed hay free choice, and allow cows and ewes to sort it and pick out the best parts. • Reduce the amount of hay -crop in the ration for growing animals (ewe lambs, market Iambs, backgrounding steers). Feed more corn silage, using a urea -containing supplement to increase the protein level where possible. If corn grain is inexpensive, consider it for replacing part of the hay. • Plan to purchase more protein for growing animals and prolific ewes. Advice Choose low cost commodities such as soybean meal, canola meal or raw soybeans. Urea can be added into a grain mix or TMR (but don't feed urea with raw soybeans!) These feeds provide cheap and digestible protein, have good palatability and match well with poor quality hay -crop forages. • Adjust the type or amount of mineral. Mature forages have lower calcium levels and vitamins are depleted in weathered hay -crops. • Feed yeast or yeast culture, to increase the fibre digesting bacteria in the rumen. Storage • Avoid mow fires; ensure hay is dry enough to bale! Use your hay dryer, and then move dried hay to an alternate location so the dryer is available for later cuttings. • Keep an inventory of all forages. Store by quality (mark silos, mows, etc.) and for year-round access to each quality type. • Make haylage instead of hay to shorten required dry -down time. Consider silage bag storage, wrapped bales, or packed and covered piles. Ensile quickly and cover immediately. • Chop hay -crop silage finer than normal to increase intake, especially when a lot of mature baled hay will be fed. Allow enough length to ensure cud chewing continues. • Inoculants may improve ensilation and stability at feeding of low sugar crops (legumes), but their benefit is debatable on higher sugar crops (grasses and corn silage). • Beware of moulds, mycotoxins and spoilage. Keep poorly preserved silages out of the feed bunk, as they may cause listeriosis and accelerated spoilage of good feed. Crop Management • Get that first cut off somehow! Regrowth is a critical issue for multi - cut systems, especially if subsequent "cuts" are grazed. Mob graze fields or use mature hay as bedding to remove it. • Save those leaves! Leaves are higher in protein and more digestible than stems. Minimize raking, inverting or tedding. Avoid handling the hay crop when moisture is under 40 per cent. • Sorghum-sudan (or pearl millet on lighter soils) are annual silage options if inventory is low. • For ewes, turnips may be considered for any late seeding (July). This can be done on land left unseeded due to spring conditions, or following winter cereals. This will extend the grazing season, reduce costs and relieve pressure on hay supplies. • Fall rye may also be considered as a grazing crop to extend the grazing season and avoid the use of diminished volumes of high quality hay. This is merely a list of suggestions. They may be used in combinations or individually as required or possible. Knowing your options ahead of time may sustain productivity using poor forages or minimize the negative impact of our weather conditions on forage quality.0 Cutting down on pre -weaning mortality losses By Ed Barrie Swine Sow -Nursery Specialist, Stratford OMAFRA Farrowing room records consistently indicate pre -weaning death losses in the range of 12 to 15 per cern. These same types of records also show some operations where death losses of five to eight per cent can be achieved regularly. The decrease is often due to the recognition that pre -weaning mortality is directly related to the requirements of the animal and the ability of the herdsperson to meet the animal's needs. Traunla is found to be the greatest cause of death in 30-45 per cent of pre -weaned pigs. A very high percentage (85 per cent) of these deaths occurs in the first three days of life. Of the pigs that die from trauma, 70 per cent were otherwise healthy. In response to this problem there are several steps that can be taken. 1. Ensure sows are in good body AUGUST 2000 47