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- From: tdwebste@sparta.uwaterloo.ca (Timothy D. Webster)
- Subject: A first hand reflection on livestock practices
- Message-ID: <C024v4.w6@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca>
- Sender: news@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca
- Organization: University of Waterloo
- Date: Wed, 30 Dec 1992 05:35:28 GMT
- Lines: 70
-
- I have been reading server articles by authors how seem to lost touch
- with modern farming practices. Let me preface my remarks with the
- comment that practices have changed substantially in the last 20 years,
- because this very rapid change a wide verity of practices are present.
- Also in my opinion the common livestock management practices are if
- anything more human than earlier. This is primarily due better educated
- farmers and technology advances.
-
-
- Twenty years ago the cow calf beef operation was very popular. Dairy
- herds were quite small and cream was a valuable quantity. Calves were
- raised in doors during the winter and grazed during the summer. Cattle
- raised in doors slept on what was call a manure pack. The idea was to
- bed the cattle everyday with long straw. This long straw would provide
- the cattle a dry place to sleep. When the density of cattle was low the
- cattle would not punch through the manure pack and would walk on top of
- a mixture of manure and straw. This manure pack also kept the cattle
- warm. The problem this this technique was hooves would not ware as a
- result older cattle were often suffering from foot disorders. Also in
- the last few years there has been a dramatic shift from grains like oats
- and wheat to corn. A great shortage of straw has forced new techniques
- to be found. At this time surgical castration was the norm. The more
- human technique of know as pinching was not know to be effective.
-
- Now beef cattle are often fatten in feeder operations. Dairy herds rely
- on computerized herd breading records. Cattle are feed computer
- determined rations. Cattle are allowed to wander in and out of doors
- according to their desire. This practice allows cattle a chance to
- exercise and find a place most to their liking. Cattle in doors sleep
- in free stalls and walk on slatted floor. The idea of this system is to
- construct the free stall so the animal can not turn around within the
- stall, but can easily enter or leave at its leisure. This forces the
- animal not to deposit manure on its "bed". A lot less straw is required.
- The slatted floor insures that the cattle are not walking through
- manure greatly reducing foot disorders. This housing method was not
- possible until large tractors became popular. Dairy operations sell
- most of the male caves as veal. Veal does not require castration.
- Horns are eliminated at a younger age, by acid or by burning much
- like you would remove a wart. Yes not totally painless, but as painless
- has you can make this necessary procedure. When castration is necessary
- pinching is used.
-
- Cream is now produced in excess and almost considered a byproduct. Milk
- quotas the most expensive aspect of the Dairy operation. Milk quotas
- are the single most significant inhibiting factor in the modernization
- of dairy operations and the introduction of a new generation of farmers.
- The concept of supply management is not entirely bad, but the current
- pricing structure is both harmful to consumers and producers alike.
- The price paid for butter fat (cream) should be 1/3 of its current
- price. Recently consumer preference has change to low milk fat products
- and butter has been substituted by vegetable oils. As a result cream
- supply is far greater than its demand. At its current price it is even
- harder to sell. Farmers are trying to breed for more protein and less
- fat milk, but this will take 10 years or longer. All milk prices should
- be reduced to 3/4 of their current price and perhaps lower. As a farmer
- I know large dairy farms can produce milk for less, High milk prices
- results in a high milk quota price. The current practice excessively
- protects out of date and small producers, by providing high milk prices
- to keep them in business, while preventing large producers and young
- producers from expanding because of the high cost of quota. If the
- Milk Board continues its anti-competitive practices it should be eliminated.
-
- This was provided to hopefully provide some factual bases to the livestock
- discussion. Please clip and send the last paragraph to your MP, MPP or
- local news paper. Help young farmers by reducing quota prices through the
- reduction of milk prices.
-
- Quota is a license to sell determined quantity of a product.
-
- -Tim.
-