[Jacob-list] General Feeding Question
Jennifer
gotothewhip at aol.com
Sun Jan 22 22:48:12 EST 2012
This is such an important aspect that so many miss. Our mountain grass (Orchard Grass and Timothy) often has a higher palatability, and offers more protein content than many porrly handled Alfalfa hays ...Not all Grass hays re created equal... This year during the drought, many folks from out of state had a hard time understanding Colorado's hays and hay seasons....
Jennifer Tucker
Moose Mtn Ranch
www.MooseMtnRanch.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Neal Grose <nlgrose at yadtel.net>
To: jacob-list <jacob-list at jacobsheep.com>
Sent: Sun, Jan 22, 2012 7:30 pm
Subject: Re: [Jacob-list] General Feeding Question
When all else fails, test the hay for feed quality. Stemy alfalfa may be worse nutritionally than grass. Grass grown up north tends to have higher energy value than that grown in the summer here in the southeast. What makes the most difference is the total energy value of the entire diet that they actually consume.
Neal Grose
From: tlund at eclipsebordercollies.com
Sent: Sunday, January 22, 2012 9:29 AM
To: jacob-list at jacobsheep.com
Subject: [Jacob-list] General Feeding Question
Hi everyone,
I have a general feeding question I am hoping someone can answer:
My Jacobs are given free choice alfalpha grass (that is all I could get economically this fall - pasture grass was 2-3 times more expensive). This summer they were pasture grass grazed.
But they are skinny (I can feel hip bones and on some the ribs don't have a layer over them) I just dewormed them thinking they may not be converting the food right from worms. Should I be feeding grains or all purpose stockfeed to get some weight on them?
I was giving them a sheep mineral block - but the goats were standing on it and the sheep ate it in a month so I wasn't sure if they were getting to much of the minerals.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Have a great day and thank you for all the wonderful informaion that is on this list. I really love this breed:)
Tashia Lund
Eclipse Border Collies
955 Highway 81 NE
Cummings ND 58223-9552
www.eclipsebordercollies.com
701-330-3195
On January 21, 2012 at 12:15 PM jacob-list-request at jacobsheep.com wrote:
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> 1. Re: Cull Percentages (Linda)
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> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 20 Jan 2012 20:27:56 -0500
> From: Linda <patchworkfibers at windstream.net>
> Subject: Re: [Jacob-list] Cull Percentages
> To: psisk at hughes.net
> Cc: jacob-list at jacobsheep.com, mvanbeek7 at gmail.com
> Message-ID: <4F1A149C.2090402 at windstream.net>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; Format="flowed"
>
> Good point. To answer Peggy's question, it helps to add what your
> selection/culling priorities are.
> Linda
>
> On 1/15/2012 11:04 AM, psisk at hughes.net wrote:
> > I can only remember the last three years but they are: 2009 - 20%,
> > 2010 - 60%, 2011 - 0%
> > My criteria for all years was horns and facial markings. In 09 and 10
> > I also culled some ewes that werent producing good horn. I also
> > changed rams for 2011 as my old ram died. With the culling of some
> > ewes and the new ram I got 100% perfect four horns this year.
> > Paul
> >
> > Jan 14, 2012 01:34:52 PM, mvanbeek7 at gmail.com
> > <mailto:mvanbeek7 at gmail.com>; wrote:
> >
> > *Question: What are you percentages on culling for each lambing
> > yr? I am curious to know. *
> >
> > **
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------
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