beef: caring for cattle in the feedlot

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Joan Ruskamp-Dodge, NE Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

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Joan Ruskamp-Dodge, NE. Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot. The Ruskamp Family. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Joan Ruskamp-Dodge, NE •

Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Page 2: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

The Ruskamp Family

Page 3: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Aerial view of our feedlot: The top is the east end. A fresh water pond collects water from the west while a holding pond catches all feedlot runoff and water from the north-110 acres

total. The holding pond is used to irrigate farm ground.

Page 4: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Cattle Nutrition-utilizing feed like hay, corn, corn silage, soybeans, distillers grains

and a supplement to balance vitamins/minerals needed. All feed is

measured using scales.

Page 5: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Feed is formulated into rations according to the age/size of the animal. A scale on

the feedtruck distributes the exact amount.

Page 6: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Health-walking through every pen, every day to make sure all animals are well. Sick animals are

removed from the pen and treated.

Page 7: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

There are steps taken when antibiotics are used to treat cattle. Animals are treated according to label instructions and

veterinary supervision. Animals are traced using methods ranging from index cards to laptop computers.

Page 8: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

HealthVaccinations to prevent disease Treatment with antibiotics if they get sick Adherence to withdrawal times before shipping out to processing phase.

Page 9: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Cattle have access to fresh water. This means cleaning tanks often.

Page 10: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Cattle Comfort-use of bedding and windbreaks for extreme cold

Page 11: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Removing and/or piling snow in the pens for dry places to lay down.

Page 12: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Cattle have hair coats designed to handle living outside.

Page 13: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Making sure cattle get fed at normal times during snow storms.

Page 14: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

When it is hot, dry and dusty we wet down the pens to control the dust.

Page 15: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

For extreme heat we have sprinklers to cool the cattle as a

mist along the bunk

Page 16: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Cattle at the feedlot have plenty of room to walk around and lay down.

Page 17: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Continuous improvements are made such as building steel fence.

Page 18: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Farmers and ranchers are both important in providing beef for food.

Cattle are content on grass. USDA says 85% of all land not suitable for crops but can be grazed.

Cattle are content on dirt. If we fed cattle like we did in 1955 we would need 165 million more acres-1/2 the size of Texas.

Page 19: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Beef and the Environment

• Washington State University study in 2007 shows we raise 13% more beef from 13% fewer cattle.

• Produce 18% less carbon emissions• Take 30% less land• Require 14% less water• EPA shows beef production accounts for only

2.8% country’s greenhouse emissions compared to 26% for transportation.

Page 20: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

This is the reason we do what we do-giving people beef to eat.

Chef Steve getting ready to slice the Christmas Eve prime rib.

Beef provides ZIP-zinc, iron and protein in a nutrient dense product.

Page 21: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Cattle give us much more than food!99% of the animal is used!

• Beef at work, play and in the home:• bone china shaving cream• leather sporting goods soaps• Bone meal violin strings• biscuits insecticides• Luggage toothpaste• boots and shoes upholstery• Paint glue• candles floor wax• pet foods fabric softeners• cosmetics textiles• photographic film doggie chews• crayons detergents• Plastics shampoo/cream rinses• deodorants In the pharmacy: Insulin, Heparin, Corticotrophin, Thyrotropin, Parathyroid Hormone, Thrombin,

Glucagon, Sodium levothyroxine, Fibrinolysin, Pancreatin, Thyroid, Parathyroid hormone.On the road: asphalt, rubber tires, stearic acid to help tires keep their shape from the heat of friction, hydraulic fluid, car waxes, textiles for upholstery,Chemical manufacturers use the fatty acids for: cement blocks, explosives, lubricants, printing ink, whitener for paper, molds for plastics, fertilizer…

Page 22: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Beef is Big for Nebraska• $12.1 billion impact to Nebraska's Economy • 20,000 beef cow operations • 1.88 million head of beef cows • The average herd size is 94 head • 4,570 cattle feeding operations statewide • 5.1 million cattle fed and marketed per year • On average there are 2.3 million head of cattle on feed • Only 770 feeding operations are larger than 1,000

head • Cattle outnumber Nebraskan’s 4:1• Farms/ranches makeup 93% state’s land area

Page 23: Beef: Caring for Cattle in the Feedlot

Resources:www.nebeef.org

www.ExploreBeef.orgwww.findourcommonground.com

www.commongroundnebraska.com

Questions?