Harvesting corn wet may be an option for producers who want to avoid high drying costs this year.
Feeding
NDSU’s dairy specialist offers tips for making good corn silage.
Harvesting corn at the proper moisture level is important in making good silage.
Making earlage requires following good corn silage making principles.
Lack of maturity could cause corn harvesting and storage problems this year.
Harvesting corn at the proper moisture level and packing it properly are keys to good-quality corn silage.
Range monitoring helps producers provide abundant and nutritious forage for their livestock.
Plants can help signal overgrazing on rangeland.
Canola can be a feed source if producers follow some common-sense precautions when introducing it to their livestock.
Producers should test forage before feeding it to their livestock.
Drought has lowered the quality of water available to livestock in parts of North Dakota.
Producers may be able to use some weeds as feed for their cattle.
Monitoring key sites will help rangeland managers see what’s happening in an entire management unit.
Harvesting light test weight barley as a forage crop may be a viable option this year.
Early weaning is an option for cattle producers in areas where drought has reduced forage production.
NDSU’s Central Grasslands Research Extension Center will help producers learn how to better monitor their rangeland.
NDSU is offering range managers a new online forum to share ideas, and post and answer questions.
NDSU’s dairy specialist offers some tips on controlling feed costs.
Producers should have drought-stressed crops tested for nitrate before using them as forage for livestock.
The newest report on NDSU’s beef cattle and range research is online.
A contact could help ensure that forage providers get paid for their product.
NDSU will break ground May 30 on two agricultural research facilities.
Water quality is as important as quantity for livestock in drought conditions.
Farmers and ranchers who have forage for sale can list it on a NDSU database designed to help feed sellers and buyers connect.
NDSU’s rangeland specialist offers advice on grazing or haying range or pastureland following a wildfire.
Drought can create conditions for the development of grass tetany in livestock.
Livestock need adequate, good-quality water during a drought.
Sending cattle to graze in another state could lead to importation issues when producers bring their livestock back to North Dakota.
Cattle producers should get their calves vaccinated for bovine respiratory disease before turning them out to pasture.
Genetics could play a larger role in improving cattle quality and cutting feed costs.
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