I will go ahead and admit that I am a skeptic here on "bale grazing" and "licking snow". BUT, I am always interested in hearing of new ways to skin a cat. So this is interesting to me. fedup2, I read the first link you posted, and a few ? came to mind for anyone that wants to answer them.
1. How do you control feed consumption other than letting the cattle have access to only x amount of bales/day? I thought I understood Northern Rancher to mean that he puts out several days worth of hay at a time. So after they go through the hay, do you hold them off it for a time, or go ahead and let them into the next "feed"? Here, if we are rolling out hay to cows, and they did not clean up everything from the day before, we give them less the 2nd day. We have never fed extra to let them bed in it, and I also have to think that with bale grazing, the cattle would rather bed on the eaten down bales than out in 2 ft. of snow.
2. As far as licking snow goes, do younger animals do ok also? I assume they must have to get used to this, as we have had the water freeze up, etc. and our cattle almost won't eat hay again until they get a drink. And this is with snow on the ground.
I don't know if this is generally an option for us anyway, as we winter cows many miles apart, and we try and not feed them any hay until either the grass runs out, or we happen to get too much snow. Or the snow crusts. Our grass is strong enough that you would never need to feed hay if we could avoid it. Just a few # of cake every other day or so will do the job when winter sets in. It's the droughts that raise as much cane with that as it is the deep snow.
Don't shoot any arrows at me here, I seriously am interested in learning.

After all, we are doing a lot of things now that our ansestors would have laughed at. :shock: