Faster horses
Well-known member
Moormans has been a good mineral, but I'm not sure if Moormans is the same anymore. Moormans was owned by ADM, which I'm not fond of, because of them competing with us for the protein dollar.
Where is your mineral made? In our country you can't buy Moormans mineral anymore. It has a different name and is made somewhere else.
I can understand them saying cattle eat more Vigortone which makes it higher...hahahaha...that is because theirs is a lot higher per bag. But Moormans has been Vigortones biggest competitor because it was such a good product in the past, even though it was higher priced.
Cattle need to eat mineral before it can do them any good. Bags sitting in the shed doesn't help cattle much. :wink:
OK, a good mineral program can keep your cattle healthy in just about every way. If you are feeding mineral year-round and free-choice and still having problems like cleaning, hoof rot, pink-eye, pneumonia, scours, ringworm, rough hair, red on the shoulders, your mineral isn't doing what it should. With the right mineral program you should see basically NONE of what I just posted and you should have seen an increase in weaning weights, better conception rates and more calves born in the first heat cycle. Your cattle should carry better condition on the same feed because of the yeast culture in the mineral helping the rumen to work better. Be sure to see that your mineral has yeast culture, if it doesn't don't buy it. (I am serious about this...)
$25/per head for the summer? I would say that is too high. We sell an IGR fly control mineral that works well. How you tell if the fly mineral is working is to see if your cattle still bunch up during the day. If they don't bunch up, the fly control is working. We will never get rid of ALL the flies. It just isn't going to happen. But it isn't an economic loss until the cattle bunch and quit grazing. If we can keep the fly load down, the cattle will keep grazing and gaining weight. One of the biggest mistakes made with fly contol in the mineral is not putting it out early enough in the spring and not leaving it out long enough in the fall.
IGR (Insect Growth Regulator) causes the eggs to hatch prematurely. They can't fly so they die. Horn flies can fly 1/2 mile to the host animal.
So it is best if you are not within 1/2 mile of neighboring cattle and get their flies. Even so, in two weeks you will see less flies anyway. Just try to get the fly control mineral out soon enough in the spring so that you are ahead of the flies, not behind them. Leaving it out later in the fall, causes much less of a carry-over so there are less flies to start with in the spring.
We have done a workup for yearling people and the IGR in the mineral is cheaper and more effective than fly tags.
As for the medication, why are they having you use that during the summer? I assume it is CTC. Our recommendation is to use it two weeks prior to calving and at least until you turn the bulls out. There really isn't any need to use it all summer, unless you have a problem I'm not familiar with. CTC really cleans up secondary infections after calving and is good for the baby calves too. Keeps runny noses and sniffles to a minimum. They eat it real well. Since we started using the CTC, very seldom do we have to cull a 2 or 3 year old for not breeding back. It is a truely awesome product and you only need to use it for a window of time.
I hope this helps!
Where is your mineral made? In our country you can't buy Moormans mineral anymore. It has a different name and is made somewhere else.
I can understand them saying cattle eat more Vigortone which makes it higher...hahahaha...that is because theirs is a lot higher per bag. But Moormans has been Vigortones biggest competitor because it was such a good product in the past, even though it was higher priced.
Cattle need to eat mineral before it can do them any good. Bags sitting in the shed doesn't help cattle much. :wink:
OK, a good mineral program can keep your cattle healthy in just about every way. If you are feeding mineral year-round and free-choice and still having problems like cleaning, hoof rot, pink-eye, pneumonia, scours, ringworm, rough hair, red on the shoulders, your mineral isn't doing what it should. With the right mineral program you should see basically NONE of what I just posted and you should have seen an increase in weaning weights, better conception rates and more calves born in the first heat cycle. Your cattle should carry better condition on the same feed because of the yeast culture in the mineral helping the rumen to work better. Be sure to see that your mineral has yeast culture, if it doesn't don't buy it. (I am serious about this...)
$25/per head for the summer? I would say that is too high. We sell an IGR fly control mineral that works well. How you tell if the fly mineral is working is to see if your cattle still bunch up during the day. If they don't bunch up, the fly control is working. We will never get rid of ALL the flies. It just isn't going to happen. But it isn't an economic loss until the cattle bunch and quit grazing. If we can keep the fly load down, the cattle will keep grazing and gaining weight. One of the biggest mistakes made with fly contol in the mineral is not putting it out early enough in the spring and not leaving it out long enough in the fall.
IGR (Insect Growth Regulator) causes the eggs to hatch prematurely. They can't fly so they die. Horn flies can fly 1/2 mile to the host animal.
So it is best if you are not within 1/2 mile of neighboring cattle and get their flies. Even so, in two weeks you will see less flies anyway. Just try to get the fly control mineral out soon enough in the spring so that you are ahead of the flies, not behind them. Leaving it out later in the fall, causes much less of a carry-over so there are less flies to start with in the spring.
We have done a workup for yearling people and the IGR in the mineral is cheaper and more effective than fly tags.
As for the medication, why are they having you use that during the summer? I assume it is CTC. Our recommendation is to use it two weeks prior to calving and at least until you turn the bulls out. There really isn't any need to use it all summer, unless you have a problem I'm not familiar with. CTC really cleans up secondary infections after calving and is good for the baby calves too. Keeps runny noses and sniffles to a minimum. They eat it real well. Since we started using the CTC, very seldom do we have to cull a 2 or 3 year old for not breeding back. It is a truely awesome product and you only need to use it for a window of time.
I hope this helps!