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Feed Costs on Fond du Lac Farms (& Others)

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Presentation on theme: "Feed Costs on Fond du Lac Farms (& Others)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Feed Costs on Fond du Lac Farms (& Others)
Paul Dyk December Dairy Forage Day

2 What does is cost to feed a cow?
Sources Nutritionist USDA Averages Base Diets Good for Trends Where am I at?

3 Starting Points – Places to Go

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6 What is the average Feed Cost on WI Dairy Farm?
WI Center for Dairy Profitability Purchased Feed Costs What is purchased? Protein & Minerals Corn Heifer Feed Forages? Combination of the above

7 Small Survey / Tool Development
Agents across the state Development of Collection tool (online and spreadsheet) Collection of data from across the state

8 8 Victor E. Cabrera, Dairy Ration Economics, 4 December 2009
Wisconsin Dairy Feed Evaluator General, Production, and Income Information Farm and reporter identification Milk and components Price received for milk Victor E. Cabrera, Dairy Ration Economics, 4 December 2009 08:12

9 Farms included 3 parts of the state (Fond du Lac, Jefferson, West Side of State) Collect info on farm, assistance of nutritionists and producers Purchased prices were current prices of feed (may include contracts)

10 What Prices to Use for Forages?
Producer Prices Guesses at best Not moisture adjusted Not based on markets or actual costs Standardize All US Alfalfa Hay Price Corn Price Received WI Corn Silage (multiplied by 10)

11 Can we compare farms? Issues with home grown feed
Issues with corn prices Issues with quality of information

12 Standardized Forage Prices
All US Hay Price Tracked and Published by USDA September 2009, $110/ton

13 Standardized Corn Price
Corn Price Received WI From USDA October 2008, $4.00/bu (OK, $3.98) $4/bu or $142.86/ton + $15 processing = $158/ton Purchased corn price used where applicable Corn Silage Price $40/ton Coming out of silo (includes harvesting, packing, fermentation)

14 Comparing the Farms (Milk and BF%)

15 Dry Cow (Intake and Cost)

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24 Feed Efficiency Dairy or feed efficiency reflects the level of fat-corrected milk yield produced per unit of dry matter consumed with an optimal range of 1.4 to 1.8 pounds of milk per pound of dry matter. Days in milk, age, growth, changes in body condition score, body weight, forage quality, feed additives, and environmental factors will impact feed efficiency values. One group all cows, 1.4 to 1.6 (Hutjens, 2005)

25 Monensin Effects Table 4. Summary of effectiveness of monensin by level (nine studies). Level of monensin (g/ton) Control 11g/t 15g/t 22g/t Dry matter intake (lb/day) Milk yield (lb/day) Milk fat (%) Milk protein (%) Solids corrected milk (lb) 3.5% FC milk (lb) Dairy eff (lb 3.5/lb DM) Imp milk efficiency (%) control

26 Future Plans Web-Based Tool Available to Public? Why?
Track on farm trends Compare clients from one nutritionist Compare across nutritionists

27 Benchmark of Wisconsin
IOFC Farm #5: $3.13, 13.3% 92.3% 7.6% Victor E. Cabrera, Dairy Ration Economics, 4 December 2009 7.6% 66.7% 08:12

28 Acknowledgements Cabrera, Victor (UWEX) Shaver, Randy (UWEX)
Bolton, Sterry, Milligan (UWEX)

29 Questions


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