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Full-Text Articles in Comparative Nutrition
Lot Feeding Sheep In Sheds, H E. Fels, B. Malcolm
Lot Feeding Sheep In Sheds, H E. Fels, B. Malcolm
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
The need to gather and hold sheep for slaughter or live shipment led a West Australian company!, with the Department of Agriculture, to investigate the use of sheds for short term lot feeding of sheep. Preliminary examination suggested that feedlot sheds connected by a sheep footpath to the abattoirs, railway or saleyards could be cheaper as well as more practicable than continued use of holding paddocks.
The first week or two are commonly the most difficult in lot feeding sheep or cattle. Long-term indoor lot-feeding is a normal practice in some overseas countries but we did not know whether untrained …
Feedlots For Beef In W.A. : Some Guiding Principles, D J. Barker
Feedlots For Beef In W.A. : Some Guiding Principles, D J. Barker
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
FEEDLOTS are small enclosures where all of the animal's feed is supplied from an outside source. Compared with grazing, feedlotting is an expensive method of beef production.
This article gives a guide to the requirements for establishment and management of a farm feedlot, especially the basic equipment and materials, the type of cattle most suited to feedlotting, rations and feeding techniques.
The author warns that skill and experience are needed to run a feedlot and describes feedlotting as an expensive method of beef raising when compared with grazing.
Further details are available from the author
When Is A Cattle Feedlot Profitable?, J T. Stoate
When Is A Cattle Feedlot Profitable?, J T. Stoate
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
THE current surge of interest in feedlots stems from low coarse grain prices and comparatively low early summer baby beef prices. Cattle raisers sense the opportunity for higher prices by holding the cattle on the farm over summer and autumn, and grain producers see better returns from barley and oats fed to cattle than sold as grain.
This article examines the profitability of cattle feedlots and presents sample budgets for two typical situations—the farmer who produces his own cattle but buys grain, and the cereal grower who produces grain but buys in cattle for finishing in a feedlot.
A ready …
Lot Feeding Of Beef Cattle. 2. Some Cost Factors, W J O Wilkie
Lot Feeding Of Beef Cattle. 2. Some Cost Factors, W J O Wilkie
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
BECAUSE of the difficulties that have been experienced in making lot feeding pay, it is essential to examine cost factors in some detail.
Lot Feeding Of Beef Cattle. 4. Cattle For Feed Lots, W J O Wilkie
Lot Feeding Of Beef Cattle. 4. Cattle For Feed Lots, W J O Wilkie
Journal of the Department of Agriculture, Western Australia, Series 4
BREED, age, condition, health, temperament and sex are all important in feed lot cattle.