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Beef Cattle Housing and Equipment

Beef Cattle Housing and Equipment. Chapter 18. Objectives. Describe the steps in planning for facilities and equipment for beef enterprises Describe the facilities and equipment required for beef enterprises. Planning for Facilities and Equipment. Careful planning is important for success

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Beef Cattle Housing and Equipment

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  1. Beef Cattle Housing and Equipment Chapter 18

  2. Objectives • Describe the steps in planning for facilities and equipment for beef enterprises • Describe the facilities and equipment required for beef enterprises

  3. Planning for Facilitiesand Equipment • Careful planning is important for success • Facilities and equipment vary with each farm • Careful planning can • Make cattle handling easier • Help to save labor • Make facilities safe for operators and cattle

  4. Planning for Facilitiesand Equipment (cont.) • Number of Cattle • Must be determined early on • Number based on many factors including • Availability of feed • Availability of labor • Availability of housing and equipment

  5. Planning for Facilitiesand Equipment (cont.) • Space Requirements • Facilities are based on the number of cattle • Only build what is necessary for current operation • Plan for future expansion

  6. Planning for Facilitiesand Equipment (cont.) • Kind of Facilities • Depends on the type of beef enterprise • Facilities can be classified as one of the following • Confinement • Open barn and feedlot • Open feedlot • Feeding barn and lot

  7. Planning for Facilitiesand Equipment (cont.) • Location of Facility/Environmental Factors • Easy access to good roads • Plan for easy movement of cattle • Direction of prevailing winds must be considered • Runoff must be controlled • Must be well-drained

  8. Planning for Facilitiesand Equipment (cont.) • Feed Storage and Handling • Vary from simple, manual systems to complex, automated • System must allow for expansion • Must have an adequate power supply

  9. Planning for Facilitiesand Equipment (cont.) • Amount of Land • Varies with the size of the operation • There must be enough space for • Lots • Alleys • Storage • Roadways • Allow for future expansion

  10. Planning for Facilitiesand Equipment (cont.) • Money, Labor, and Opportunity for Expansion • The amount of money available determines size and kind of facility • The system type determines the amount of labor • Amount of automation affects labor requirement

  11. Cow Herd Facilities • Generally require the simplest facilities • Cows can be on pasture in spring and fall • Need minimum shelter in the winter • Separate feedlot areas needed for different cattle • A corral with essential features is needed • A good water supply is needed

  12. Feedlots • Confinement Barns • Cold confinement • Open on one side, away from prevailing winds • Temperature is the same as outside temperature • Pole-type building or open-span construction • Requires less labor than other feed facilities • Large number of advantages

  13. Feedlots (cont.) • Confinement Barns (cont.) • Warm confinement • Closed building • Kept warmer than outside temperatures • Most expensive type of barn • Not recommended for cattle-feeding systems

  14. Feedlots (cont.) • Confinement Barns (cont.) • Three common floor systems • Solid bedded • Slotted • Solid flushing • Have wall heights of 12 to16 feet • Feed bunks, waterers placed properly • Movement of manure should be considered

  15. Feedlots (cont.) • Open Feedlots • Have no buildings • Protected by windbreak fence, sunshades • Usually not paved • Dirt mounds are used to keep cattle out of mud • Require more land • Good drainage and runoff are important

  16. Feedlots (cont.) • Open Barn and Feedlot • Protection is provided by a open-front barn • Feeding done in an open lot • Facility common in the Midwest • This facility is adapted to smaller feedlots • Usually not paved • Cattle-handling facilities are part of this facility

  17. Feedlots (cont.) • Feeding Barn and Lot • Very similar to the open barn and feedlot • Primary difference is feed bunks are located inside the barn • Feed and cattle are both protected from the weather

  18. Corrals • Provide several advantages • Corrals should consist of • Sorting, holding, and crowding pens • Working chute • Headgates • Tilting table and dipping vat • Loading chute

  19. Corrals (cont.)

  20. Corrals (cont.)

  21. Feeding Facilities • Feed Storage and Processing • Silos • Upright silos: gas-tight and conventional types • Horizontal silos: include trench, bunker, and stack type • Sealed silos • Hay can be stored in bales • Can be fed with a hay self-feeder

  22. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Storage and Processing (cont.)

  23. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Storage and Processing (cont.)

  24. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Storage and Processing (cont.) • Auger, elevators, and other conveying equipment are used for easy handling of grain

  25. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Storage and Processing (cont.) • Portable mixer • Grinders used for processing grain, roughage • Electric blender-grinder • Concentrates can be measured, ground, and mixed • Does not handle roughage

  26. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Storage and Processing (cont.) • Electric batch mill • Accurate control over ration formulation • Hay mills and tub grinders • Process roughages • Feed centers may be located in an area away from the feedlot and transported

  27. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Bunks • Kinds of feed bunks used for feeding • Portable lot bunks • Fence-line bunks • Mechanical bunks • Covered bunks

  28. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Bunks (cont.) • Portable lot bunks • Made of wood • Less expensive than other bunks • Fourteen feet in length • Three tofive feet wide • Flat-bottomed and V-shaped bottoms are used

  29. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Bunks (cont.) • Mechanical bunks • Require a huge capital investment • Two types – auger, chain-slat conveyor • All bunks require wiring, electric motors, and electric controls • Wide, as cattle eat from both sides

  30. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Bunks (cont.) • Fence-line bunks • Well adapted to large feedlots • Made of wood or concrete • Usually wider at the top than the bottom • Some designed with roof for weather protection

  31. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Bunks (cont.)

  32. Feeding Facilities (cont.) • Feed Bunks (cont.) • Covered bunks • Have a covered roof • Provide protection for mechanical feeding equipment and shade for cattle • In north, placed so sun can reach bunk for thawing

  33. Other Equipment • Cattle gain better with good, fresh, clean water • Automatic waterers may be used • Concrete water troughs also used • Frost-free hydrants can be used to supply water to a trough

  34. Other Equipment (cont.) • Commercial mineral feeders • Weather vane • Sunshades • Can lower temperatures by 10 degrees • Back rubbers • Creep feeders, self-feeders, calf shelters

  35. Other Equipment (cont.) • Cattleguard • Allows equipment to be driven into an area so the operator does not have to stop • More expensive than traditional gates • Don’t use if trespassing, vandalism is problem • Most cattle are afraid to cross • Bosindicuscattle less afraid to jump guard

  36. Other Equipment (cont.)

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