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hen you live in Oklahoma or Texas, drought management should never be far from
your mind. Last year was about as good of a rainfall year as you could ask for
in most of the Foundations service area. Unfortunately, 2003 does not
seem to be following the same pattern. Even though some of Oklahoma received
above average rainfall in May, the state is well below normal for the year (see
table). The two main considerations for cattle producers in times of drought
are drought feeding management and culling strategies.

| Drought Feeding Management |
- High nitrate levels are a significant concern when any hay, but especially
sorghum-type hay, is subjected to moisture stress. Before feeding these
hays, have a nitrate test performed.
- Prussic acid accumulation can be a problem in grazing drought-stunted
plants such as Johnson grass and sorghum/sudan varieties. If forage
for hay is allowed to cure thoroughly until any bright green color is
gone (typically three to five days), prussic acid should not be a problem.
- Utilize an energy-based supplement when forage is limited and make
sure the protein is of an all-natural source. When supplements containing
urea are used by cattle in a forage-limited situation, urea toxicity
can occur.
- Cattle grazing short pasture are more likely to consume toxic plants.
- Be aware of the potential for hardware disease. In times of drought,
hay is harvested anywhere there is standing forage, including roadsides,
abandoned pastures, etc. The likelihood of the hay containing metal
objects such as cans, wire or other objects is greater than in normal
years. These foreign objects can pierce the rumen wall resulting in
the death of the animal.
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Culling Strategies
One of the hardest management decisions for most producers to make is to
cull potentially productive cows. However, in times of drought, to ensure
the long-term viability of the operation, culling may be a necessary decision.
Therefore, utilize a systems approach to making this decision. |
- Cull any cow that doesnt have a calf at her side. If a cow calved
during the last calving season and lost a calf, sell her regardless
of age or pregnancy status. Additionally, cull any virgin heifers. These
heifers will have the highest nutritional requirements over the next
two years, rebreed at the lowest rate and wean the lightest calves.
- Accurately assess the status of your remaining herd. This should be
done by palpating and identifying cows by stage of pregnancy and evaluating
the physical condition of each individual cow (feet and legs, teeth,
udders, etc). Cull the cows in this order: any cow physically unable
to produce at the average level of the herd, any open cow, any short
bred cows (relative to the rest of the cow herd). Remember, this is
not an all or none situation. Remove the identified cows
in the above order until the remaining cow herd can be supported with
available forage, hay, leased land or supplemental feed.
- If you have culled the previously identified cattle and are still
facing a forage deficit situation, the situation becomes tougher. Attempt
to identify those cattle that have the highest likelihood of producing
above average calves for the next few years. A sound record keeping
system will greatly simplify this activity. Without adequate records,
this may require a crystal ball to predict accurately, but producers
can use body condition score as a good estimator. Cull any extremely
thin (BCS 3 and under) cows of any age and then cull any thin to moderately
thin (BCS 4 and under) younger and older cows.
- Culling the cowherd further is akin to pulling teeth, however, in
some extreme situations, it must be done. Cull all 8-year-old and older
cows and any cow younger than four years of age. This will leave you
with the core of your productive cowherd with which to try to survive
the drought.
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We all hope that rainfall will be adequate this year and you will not need
to implement any of these management strategies. Unfortunately, some time in
the future our area will see drought again. It never hurts to be prepared to
make the hard decisions ... Just in case.
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