3 M L & C
Well-known member
I have heard of guys thinking that heifers close to calving that tanked up on the tub aborted calves from to much urea, is there anything to this?
3 M L & C said:I have heard of guys thinking that heifers close to calving that tanked up on the tub aborted calves from to much urea, is there anything to this?
3 M L & C said:I have heard of guys thinking that heifers close to calving that tanked up on the tub aborted calves from to much urea, is there anything to this?
Prevention and Control:
Urea should not be fed at a rate exceeding 2-3% of the concentrate or grain portion of ruminant diets and should be limited to ≤1% of the total diet. Additionally, NPN should constitute no more than one-third of the total nitrogen in the ruminant diet. Once the decision is made to feed NPN, animals must be slowly adapted to, and maintained on, a consistent dietary NPN content with no significant deviation. Temporary absences of NPN from the diet should be avoided at all costs. While properly adapted adult cattle can tolerate up to 1 g urea/kg body wt/day, a safer feeding rate is no more than half that amount.
John SD said:It is my understanding that urea is a big no-no around horses and perhaps other non-ruminant animals. T or F?
George said:Even if it does not hurt horses why would you want to wast money allowing them to consume something that will not do them good?
George said:Even if it does not hurt horses why would you want to wast money allowing them to consume something that will not do them good?