Backgrounding Calves

Backgrounding Calves

Backgrounding simply means growing calves bigger (after weaning) before they go into a finishing program. Some producers hold their calves to sell later as yearlings, and some buy light calves in the spring to put on grass in a stocker program and grow to a larger weight. Some put weaned calves into a confinement program and feed a growing ration until they are ready to go to a finishing facility. The calves might be on pasture with a supplement or in a confinement program on a growing ration—about 90 to 100 days of backgrounding.

This year things are a bit different, with high prices for calves and high cost of feed in many regions. Dr. Ron Gill, Texas A & M, Agrilife Extension, says that if you are buying calves to background, you have to look hard at pricing—in terms of what the calves are bringing today and what you might expect them to bring when you sell them.

“In our area the cost of feed is so high that you need to carefully calculate the cost of gain and value of gain. Right now, the value of gain is borderline regarding whether you can make money doing this. It may be different if these are your own calves that you are keeping and feeding and looking farther down the road to what those carcasses might be worth. There are many things to consider,” he says.

Having your own calves and accessible feed sources may work out better than if you are trying to buy calves and buy feed that must be hauled very far. “Buying calves right now is a gamble,” says Gill.

“I think there is a lot of risk, especially when calves are worth so much right off the cow or after weaning. When they are worth that much it’s harder to talk yourself into keeping them. Even if calves are not preconditioned, they are bringing pretty good money this year, but there is still about a $10-$12 premium in some areas for the 45-60 day calves that been weaning.”

It’s important to identify your end target. “If you will be selling them directly as beef or you are part of a supply chain you want to keep cattle in, or keep cattle coming to, this may change the picture a little—to maintain those relationships,” he says. Each producer’s situation is a little different; you have to figure out what will work for you.

“There is no blanket advice that can be given. There are many tough decisions—whether to keep calves longer, or keep heifers. It might be good to keep them longer, in terms of inventory, but you don’t know if things will change next year and whether there will be pasture. Some people are restocking now, but that’s a gamble, too. Many people got burned the last time they tried to keep heifers and background them through winter to sell as bred heifers or ready to breed,” says Gill. And there’s no crystal ball in terms of what the weather will be.

“A lot will depend on available feed resources. If you will be purchasing calves and backgrounding them, you’ll need to find calves you can purchase somewhat under the average market price. Then your margins might be a little better when you get them straightened out and on feed. Success with this will often depend on what you value those cattle in at or what you actually purchase them for—and their health.”

If the calves are coming out of drought areas and might be stressing, they may not have strong immunities. You don’t want a health wreck. “Any time calves are this high price, the risk of one of them dying takes away all the profit. We’ve seen a higher incidence of respiratory disease in calves over the last few years, even in good years. I think genetics play a role in this. You want to know as much as possible about the cattle. In general, the more straight-bred they are, the more likely they are to get sick. A good crossbred animal has more vigor, performance, and immunity,” he says.

“These are things to think about when buying calves, to have as little risk as possible. If you are backgrounding, maybe you can find someone who has weaned their calves for 45 to 60 days and you can just take them and go.

That would be the safest bet,” says Gill.

“Like any margin business, do your budgets realistically. Don’t underestimate health issues or overestimate performance. It might pay to look at some of the pricing mechanisms—maybe locking in a certain price—to eliminate a big loss.”

Probably the value of calves coming out of a backgrounding program and into the finishing yards will be pretty high, but we don’t know. It always pays to do some number crunching, though some people just keep backgrounding calves because that’s what they’ve always done. “This happens a lot in most segments of the beef industry; you might make a little money two years and then lose it all over the next three! It just seems there is more risk this year, because of instability of the market (regarding cost of feed as well as cattle). If you can limit or mitigate the effect of those unknowns it probably pays to keep doing what you know how to do, in terms of backgrounding, whether doing custom backgrounding or backgrounding your own calves,” says Gill.

Food sources are important; it helps to have local supplies rather than something that requires hauling a long distance. “With the cost of fuel, if you have to haul very far it’s tough!” he says.

If you are not in a persistent drought and can produce your own hay (or buy local hay reasonably priced) and have a consistent forage source, feeding cattle is more feasible. “There are still a lot of byproducts like gluten and distillers grains available for mixing rations, so the main thing would be access and trucking.”

Backgrounding In Missouri

Neal and Linda Niendick and son Ben own a feedlot and backgrounding business near Wellington, Missouri, When Ben came home from college in 2016 they added onto the operation to be able to background more calves.

“We do a lot of custom feeding and own a few of the cattle ourselves,” says Ben. “Calves usually come to us weighing between 600 and 650 pounds and we feed them for 150 or more days, to get them up to about 850 and sometimes 900 pounds—ready to go out west to get finished.”

There are very few finishing facilities in Missouri; most calves go to feedlots in western Kansas and some to Nebraska. Conditions in Missouri aren’t ideal for finishing cattle because weather is hot and humid in summer and muddy in winter. “Another disadvantage is that we are farther from the processing plants. This might change in the future, to where there could be more finishing opportunities here,” he says.

Missouri produces a lot of cattle (it is usually second or third in the nation for cow-calf numbers) and most calves are backgrounded before being sent to finishing yards. “Many of the calves we get come from sale barns, but some of our customers send calves off their farms and retain ownership. Some customers send calves they buy at the sale barns,” says Ben.

He and his dad usually feed about 1500 calves, with numbers fluctuating depending on time of year. The facility is strictly a confinement situation. “In our area there’s not much pasture; it’s all crop land. We run a few cows on some grass, but we only have 25 acres of pasture,” he explains.

Their facility is close to several sale barns, and there are many cow-calf producers in this area. “Being close to Kansas is an advantage, too. The sale barns here have good runs every week. There is a great supply of cattle; we don’t have any trouble keeping our pens full.”

When calves arrive, many of them are ready for another round of vaccinations. “We usually process them upon arrival. One of the things we did when I got back from college and became more active in the operation was to improve our working facility so we could handle calves as easily and smoothly as possible,” he says. They are coming from a variety of places and most of them are stressed already, so it’s important to not add more stress.

“We assess their condition. Some just came off grass or were recently weaning and may not know how to eat from a bunk. We determine what kind of ration to start them on,” Ben says.

Those calves go into pens close to the barn for the first week or two so they can be in close monitoring for any signs of illness. “We keep a close eye on them, especially when it’s hot, and also in the winter; our winters can be pretty rough on them,” he says.

The calves generally start on a high-roughage diet, and gradually bump up to grower rations, gaining about 2 ½ pounds per day. “We don’t want to get them too fleshy until they reach the right frame size. We want them to just keep growing, without getting fat. So, they can put on weight when they go west for finishing,” Ben explains.

With custom feeding, the rations may vary. Every customer is a little different regarding the goal for their cattle, and what they want them to gain. “We customize the ration for each group,” Ben says.

The farm grows all the feed necessary; the only things purchased are minerals and feed additives. “We can chop our own feed and do it at the right time, at the right stage of maturity.” Ben says. “Also, we combine our own corn, and have a roller mill, and don’t have to buy any corn. We work closely with a nutritionist from Great Plains Livestock Consulting in eastern Nebraska.” The cattle are always on harvested feed, since their backgrounding operation has no pasture for calves.

In winter the biggest challenge is keeping pens clean and minimizing mud. “We don’t want the cattle lying in mud, so we’ve built mounds in each pen so they can get up off the wettest ground,” Ben says.

In summer they put up shades. Studies have shown a 30-degree difference in ground temperature underneath the shade versus out in the sun. “As soon as we put up shades, the cattle use them; even the new arrivals figure it out pretty quick. We provide about 10 square feet of shade per head,” Ben says. This takes a lot of pressure off the water. They don’t need to drink quite as much, and they stay in the shade. And they are not in groups around the waterers all the time. It’s important to have plenty of water space per head, with good capacity.

October 2024

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Making Early Weaning Easy

Making Early Weaning Easy

Sometimes weaning calves early can be beneficial for both the cows and calves.

To do this efficiently, however, it’s important to plan ahead and be set up to do it properly.  Dr. Greg Lardy, North Dakota State University, says most producers who try early weaning are using it as a drought management tool, or in other situations where they may be facing a forage shortage.

“It can work effectively in those conditions because the big advantage of early weaning is reducing lactation demands on the cow.  A dry cow on drought-stressed forage has much lower nutrient demands than a cow hitting peak lactation.  Producers who have been able to utilize this option have made it a very effective tool in dealing with drought,” he says.

“The big issue is what to do with the calves.  Do you have facilities and feedstuffs to manage them effectively?  If you do early-wean calves, especially if they are only 2 to 3 months of age, they have relatively high nutrient requirements and need a high-quality diet,” he explains.  Some people may wean them that early, while others may be weaning at 4 to 5 months of age, rather than their traditional 8 to 9 months of age. 

“Another circumstance where I see this management tool used effectively is with calves from first-calf (2-year-old) heifers.  In addition to lactation demand, the 2-year-old is still trying to grow and reach mature size.  Even in a non-drought situation, it can help these young cows if you don’t leave calves on them too long.  You free up the cow’s nutrients to complete growth and have a healthy pregnancy.”

Lardy always recommends doing some planning if you decide to early wean.  “This is not something you just jump into.  You need to figure out how you want to do it and make sure you have facilities in place, feed for the calves, and work with your veterinarian to make sure you have the proper animal health program for those early-weaned calves,” he says.

Some people plan on feeding the calves while others just wean them on pasture.  “Many producers in my area are used to doing backgrounding or heifer development with their calves, so they already have facilities, and some experience handling calves post-weaning.  So handling calves that are a little younger—say 4 to 5 months old–is not a big stretch.  But if you get into a situation where you need to wean because of severe drought and decide to take them off the cow at 2 months of age, this is a different animal than most producers are comfortable with or used to handling.  Many people don’t know if they can properly care for the calves at that age,” says Lardy.

“But if you meet their nutritional requirements, you can successfully wean them that young.  Most people I’ve worked with on this are weaning at 4 to 5 months of age and the calves have a little more growth and can make the transition better.”  They are used to eating more forage and it’s not such an abrupt change.

“Some people wean them and if the markets are good they’ll go ahead and sell them as lightweight feeder calves early in the season.  They may weigh only 350 to 400 pounds and are sent to a stocker operation.  Other people have the facilities and feed to manage those calves and sell them later, at the time they normally would.  Some are working with a feedlot and maybe retain ownership on those calves,” he says.

“When working with really lightweight calves, the facilities you built to handle 500-600 pound calves when you wean in October aren’t going to work as well for a 250-pound calf weaned in July.  Those calves can find the tiniest hole in the fence and crawl out.  They may also have problems reaching over a bunk to eat, or reaching the water in a tank.  I tell people not to make the decision one day and go out and wean calves the next.  Make sure you think through some of these things and adjust the facilities,” he explains.

You may also have to deal with heat stress that time of year.  “With early weaning, especially in a drought, you are almost always dealing with hot, dry weather—higher temperatures than normal.  Heat stress can be factor, so take that into account when weaning and handling calves, and working the cows, as well.  Some years, even in our climate, there are severe heat loads on cattle, and some people actually lose cattle—due to high temperatures, high humidity and lack of a breeze,” says Lardy.

You might need to provide shade for the calves, instead of protection from fall and winter storms.  “With earlier weaning dates, make sure you can protect calves from heat.  Having plenty of fresh water is important, and some calves have no experience drinking from tanks or fountains.  They may have been drinking from a dugout, pond or stream,” he says.

Sometimes it helps to put the cows and calves into the weaning pen or pasture a few days ahead of time, so cows can show the calves where the feed and water is.  “Some people also have success with a trainer/babysitter cow, or even an older feeder calf as a role model.”  The older animal can teach the young ones, and act as security for them, in a leader/follower role.  That animal can have a calming influence on younger calves.

“It’s important to work with your veterinarian to make sure you have a good vaccination program in place that will work for early-weaned calves.  You need to plan this a little, but sometimes a person needs to take emergency action.  If your pastures had fire damage and you lost a lot of forage, you may not have time to do much planning.”

Weaning early can take some of the pressure off forage supplies and nutrients required by the lactating cow.  By the time a calf gets to be 4 to 5 months of age he is eating a significant amount of forage.  “The lactating cow is eating more forage than a dry cow.  The people I’ve worked with over the years who have weaned early tell me they can notice a difference in pastures, grazing dry cows rather than pairs.  This can aid recovery of pastures the following year, as well,” says Lardy.

When weaning early, producers should prepare facilities, taking behavioral issues into account.  When calves are weaning in pens, they circle the pen, trying to find a way out.  “If the water source is located in the fence line, calves will find it quicker.  If it’s in the center of the pen they will find it eventually, but it will take longer,” he explains.  Having feed bunks in the fence will also help them find the feed more readily.

Starting young calves out on fine, palatable long-stem forage is also a good idea, because this is the type of feed they are most familiar with.  “You also need to get them transitioned onto some energy-dense, nutritious feeds fairly quickly, since they can’t handle much volume of forage yet.  You might use a starter pellet from a commercial feed company or mix the diet yourself, but these calves need good-quality forage and nutritious concentrate to make sure they have adequate protein and energy levels and their vitamin/mineral requirements.  Avoid low-quality hay, or any hay with dust, mold or heat damage, as these will lead to problems in early-weaned calves,” he says.

“When you wean a calf that’s only 2 to 3 months old, the rumen volume is much less than that of a calf that’s 6 months old or older.  The young calves need a denser diet.  A nutritionist available through your extension service or a feed company can help you with the ration.  There are many ways you can do it, but you need to make sure you are providing the nutrition these calves need,” he says.

“If you have time, it pays to do any castration, dehoring, branding, etc. well ahead of weaning (at least a couple weeks) or a couple weeks after weaning.  If you compound the stress of weaning with these things, you are potentially setting yourself up for additional problems,” says Lardy.

Weaning in summer there will also be fly issues, as well as heat.  “If the calves are in a pen, there are some easy control measures to cut down on flies—whether it’s fly tags or a spray application of pesticide.  Some feedlots also use parasitic wasps to control flies that breed in manure.  Fly control should not be overlooked because flies are one more stress you don’t want,” he says.

“Another issue in a drought is that you often end up with dusty conditions in pens.  Finding a way to manage dust is a good idea because it’s an irritant to the eyes (opening the way for pinkeye) and to the nasal cavity and airways.  Irritation can contribute to additional respiratory issues.  If you can water down the pens periodically to keep dust down, this helps.  You typically have warmer temperatures than during fall weaning, and if there’s wind there will be dust blowing around,” he says. 

“If you are thinking about doing this for the first time, do some advance planning.  Sit down with your veterinarian, and a nutritionist if you have one, to work through the health and nutrition programs these calves will need, for successful early weaning.  Most of the time, early-weaned calves transition just fine, and in many cases easier than older calves in November when you get into cold stormy weather.  But it pays to work with animal health professionals and nutritionists ahead of time to make sure you are not overlooking something,” he says.

“Most of the time your veterinarian will know your herd well enough to give good advice on what to use and when to vaccinate, and whether you should do anything different than what you normally would have been doing.  If you get into a really early weaning situation, often you are still close enough to birth that you could run into interference problems when vaccinating, because the calf still has maternal antibodies from colostrum.  These are things that make it important to have a veterinarian involved because decisions may need to be made on a case-by-case basis.  We can’t give a blanket recommendation on vaccinations.  Every herd is different, which is why you need to consult with your veterinarian.”  It depends on the herd, the age of the calves, etc.

For producers whose pastures are drought-stressed, early weaning might be beneficial, according to Dr. Bart Lardner (Department of Animal & Poultry Science, College of Agriculture & Bio-Resources, University of Saskatchewan).  Last year he did some drought workshops for producers, and talked about early weaning.  “We need to make sure the calf’s rumen is functioning, and adjusted to a forage diet, and realize that we need to get calves weaned with least stress possible,” he explains.

If the calf weighs 300 to 400 pounds, what is your target for weight at sale time?  “What is your expected average daily gain?  Expected feed intake for those calves may vary; they need some forage, with enough energy and protein in the diet.  On the energy side, they need 56 to 60% TDN and on the protein side 11 to 13%,” he says.

Depending on the forage quality, a supplement may be needed—especially if forages are low-quality because of drought.  “What I’ve found over the years is that overall, calves that are 3 to 6 months of age on a typical grass-based pasture or native range will not gain more than 2 pounds per day, and in a drought year it will be less than 2 pounds.  It that’s not acceptable, you need to feed a supplement.”

This might be pellets or barley, or something else to provide the extra energy.  “These calves probably need 3 to 4 pounds per day because they are growing fast.  They also need the proper mineral balance.  Make sure the rumen is functional and they can handle various fiber sources,” says Lardner.

“We’ve looked at all kinds of different fiber sources for cows, other than a typical hay bale, and options might include salvage crops.  But with calves you want to make sure they can handle the feed and keep gaining and growing.  Basically you are just backgrounding them early.”  They need a ration appropriate to their stage of growth and development so they can hit whatever target weight you are shooting for at the time you sell them—maybe 600 to 700 pounds.

FEEDING TIPS

“In most cases calves won’t have experience with fermented feedstuffs or wet byproducts, unless their dams were being fed some of this in their ration before they went to pasture.  You need to start with feeds they are most familiar with, which is usually long-stem forages.  Then, if you want to use silages or by-products, introduce those gradually after you get the calves eating hay and they are well into the weaning process.  Then you can introduce them to these novel feeds,”
says Lardy.

Do the math and figure out how much daily gain for those particular calves needs to reach your target.  “When you early-wean, you are basically starting a backgrounding program.  Have an objective, and make sure you have a market.  You might have an arrangement with a local feed yard or someone who is finishing calves, or perhaps just selling through an auction market,” says Lardner.  If the calves are already weaned and backgrounded, they are more saleable; they are ready to go anywhere and at any time.  These cattle are very flexible for marketing.

“This can be part of a drought plan—weaning calves early and timing the marketing as needed.  Each month have a plan for what to do if you don’t get rain.  You could move this group of animals, or that group of animals, when necessary.  You are destocking, but you have a plan in place.”  Calves that are already done weaning are your most flexible group, and hopefully their body condition has not been jeopardized and they will be looking good.

By Heather Smith Thomas

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Low-Stress Weaning Strategies

Low-Stress Weaning Strategies Keep Calves Healthier

There are many ways to wean calves, but some are less stressful than others. The goal is to wean with least stress-to keep calves healthy and keep them growing/gaining without setbacks. Weaning can be the most stressful time in a calf’s life if we don’t take extra care to ease them through this transition. Many calves go through added stresses at this time if they are being vaccinated, transported, comingled with other calves (at a sale barn, growing lot, stocker pasture or feedlot), and having to adjust to a new environment.

Stress, especially if compounded, often results in illness or lower weight gain, and this means less money for whoever owns the calf at that point in its life. Studies done at Oregon State University demonstrated that these lower gains have an impact on the finished carcass. Calves that keep gaining during the receiving period do better all the way through; for each 1/10 pound of gain during the receiving period (above that of the lower-gaining stressed calves) the researchers saw about a 20-pound increase in hot carcass weight at the end of the finishing period. Lower stress at weaning not only increases carcass value, but saves money in costs of treatment for sick calves.

Past Studies

A study at Ohio State University showed that with fence-line weaning (as opposed to abrupt corral weaning) only about 15% of the calves had to be treated for BRD, and that number was doubled for calves that had to be hauled in a truck or transported at weaning. About 45% of calves that were put into a feedlot/drylot for weaning needed treatment.

Dr. Ron Gill (Texas A&M) says weaning strategies vary greatly from ranch to ranch depending on facilities and age of calves being weaned. “Traditional weaning age is about 5 to 8 months of age, sometimes older. Low-stress methods include fence-line weaning and two-stage weaning with nose flaps,” he says.

Nose Flaps

The nose flap doesn’t hinder eating or drinking, but makes it difficult for the calf to suckle. After the nose flaps are installed, calves are turned back out with the cows, and go through the first phase of weaning (unable to suckle, so the cow’s milk dries up) while still with their dam. This minimizes stress; the calf still has mama for companionship and security, and the cow isn’t worried about her calf because he is still with her. After about 5 to 7 days the flaps are removed and the pairs can be separated, and they aren’t upset because weaning has already been accomplished.

Katy Lippolis, Animal and Rangeland Sciences, Oregon State University, did her Masters work at Colorado State University, looking at low-stress weaning using nose flaps. “I evaluated weaning with nose flaps and how this affected cow performance, calf performance and carcass quality,” she says. Most producers who try nose flaps say it’s the least stressful way they’ve ever weaned calves.

How the Nose Flaps Work

Even when they are still with their mothers, there may be groups of calves wandering off from the herd and doing their own thing—like a group of teenage kids; the bond with mom is being broken. When you actually separate the cows from the calves and take out the nose flaps (about a week after putting them in) the calves are essentially weaned and don’t care very much where mom is.

“When we’re sorting them again (after they’ve had the nose flaps for a few days), putting calves one way and cows another, the calves just walk off and graze or lie down and chew their cud, completely at ease and relaxed. The cows might turn around once and then just walk away. Once you break that nursing bond (which provided comfort as well as milk), the calf is ready to go,” she says.

If you Wean let them Rest

“Anything you can do to reduce stress is beneficial,” says Gill. “The important thing with any weaning method is to not do anything else to the cattle on the day you wean. This is difficult for some operations if they won’t have another opportunity to get the cattle in, so they process the calves or cows when they separate and soft off calves. Whether you move cows through the gate and leave the calves, or separate them in a pen and let the cows back out, or send the cows one way and calves another, you want to do it as quiet as possible,” he explains.

The situations where he’s seen fence-line weaning not work is when people process cattle and get them stirred up and stressed, then turn them out with the calves on one side of a fence and the cows on the other. “The calves and cows are in panic mode already and may go through or over a fence to try to get back together,” Gill says.

With fence-line weaning, plan ahead with adequate grazing for the calves on high-quality pasture. “Otherwise you need to provide the necessary nutrition—whether it’s good hay, silage, or a grain mix—during this period of transition,” he says.

The Everchanging Factors

This decision is never static; these factors are never exactly the same from year to year. It depends on cattle markets, weather, cost of feed etc. “From a stewardship standpoint, I feel every rancher should wean calves at home in a familiar environment. Yet I realize that from an economic standpoint this may not always be the best approach. If we can get them weaned at home (even at a break-even, financially) it’s better for the cattle and for the industry.” Those calves are not as vulnerable to illness and will do better for the next owner.

“There are times, however, it may be best to just send those calves to town, right off the cow, if somebody else can manage them better. I’ve seen some people who tried to keep calves at home and didn’t have the facilities, time or labor to do it right. Those calves would have been better off shipped to someone who had the time and resources to manage them correctly. Even though the stress level might have been higher hauling them away, right off the cows, there might not be as many get sick. That’s the whole objective, to keep these cattle from getting sick at home, and keeping them from getting sick after they leave home,” says Gill.

Corral Weaning

If you have to wean calves in a corral rather than on pasture, get them used to eating the new feed before you wean them, so it’s not an abrupt change. “Teach them to eat whatever you’ll be feeding them after weaning, and do this while they are still on the cow,” Gill says.

Calves will try the new feed more readily when they are not being stressed, and will sample new feed if they see mama eating it. “This is learned behavior. Here in Texas many producers use cottonseed meal pellets/cubes as a supplement during weaning. We might feed some in the summer on pasture, just to get calves used to eating it with their mothers. Then they’ll eat it from day one, when you wean.” Otherwise they won’t eat a new feed very well after you take them off the cows and may actually lose weight for a while.

“If they aren’t eating during this time, it stresses their immune system. Usually if calves will eat, and maintain or gain weight through the first 7 to 10 days after taking them off the cows, they won’t get sick. It’s when they won’t eat and won’t drink that they get into trouble. You want to remove as many stresses as possible; then the only stress you have to worry about is the separation itself,” says Gill. The goal is to make that separation as smooth as possible.

Making Separation Smooth

“We have to find a good way to do that, since we generally can’t practice natural weaning (the cow eventually weaning the calf herself by not letting him nurse).” Cows wean their calves at some point before they get ready to have the next calf. Some cows wean the calves when they’re about 8 to 11 months old. This natural weaning is not stressful for the calf because he can still follow mama around and be with her. Even if she goes over the next hill grazing and doesn’t come back to him, he still has his familiar group to hang out with, even if he doesn’t know where she is.

Some cows kick their calves off sooner than others. If a producer calves early in the year and cattle are out on pastures that get dry in late summer and the cows are past peak lactation, milk production drops off. Some of those cows wean their calves. “There are always some that are already over that transition by the time we actually wean the group. Those calves were never stressed—similar to using the nose flaps–because they were still with their mothers.”

Stockmanship To Reduce Stress

One of the best ways to reduce stress at weaning is to use low-stress handling to quiet the calves when they are separated from their mothers—if they are weaned in a corral and their mothers are taken clear away rather than just through the fence. “Even if you get them sorted and separated quietly and put them in a pen or pasture without a lot of hassle, those calves will still walk the fence and bawl. Someone needs to get in there with them and quietly change their focus. This is part of the process we call acclimation, to get them settled into their new situation smoothly,” says Gill.

“There’s usually one or two instigators of the fence-walking and bawling, so if you can get those calves to stop walking/bawling and focus on you as a distraction, this helps. If you do this periodically during the first day or two, calves start to realize that they can stop and relax and rest. They start looking to the person for reassurance and guidance, just as they always looked to their mothers. You are the surrogate. You need to take charge of that group and let them know you can settle them down and you are the one providing their feed. Being a distraction for them, you reduce a lot of their stress,” he explains.

“We used to have a preconditioning operation and found we could dramatically reduce sickness, morbidity rates and mortality rates after we implemented good handling practices. This aspect of weaning is more valuable than most people realize,” he says. If you relieve the stress during the first day or two, they stop bawling a lot quicker.

Problems with Fence-Line Weaning

One problem with fence-line weaning if you use a feed truck to go out there or take any feed to the calves is that the cows will start bawling when they hear the truck, and they want to come to the feed. If the cows start bawling, this sets the calves off again. “I recommend a different way to go out there to feed the calves or interact with them. Go out on foot or on an ATV, or some other way that won’t attract the cows and start them bawling—or it just compounds the calves’ restlessness,” he says.

If a person has to wean in corrals and can’t do fence-line weaning, it’s just you interacting with the calves; the cows aren’t distracting them across the fence. That’s where stockmanship is very important and can make a big difference for those calves.

Home – American Cattlemen

October 2021

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Or if you enjoy the Outdoors. Including hunting, fishing, or just recreational outdoor activities the Iowa Sportsman is a great option

Home – Iowa Sportsman

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