DAIRY ST R SPRING
Calf & Heifer Special Edition
March 26, 2022
Page 2 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
DAIRY ST R www.dairystar.com
Simplifying calf chores
522 Sinclair Lewis Ave. Sauk Centre, MN 56378 Phone: (320) 352-6303 Fax: (320) 352-5647 Published by Star Publications LLC General Manager/Editor
Mark Klaphake - mark.k@dairystar.com 320-352-6303 (ofce) 320-248-3196 (cell) 320-352-0062 (home) Ad Composition
Nancy Powell 320-352-6303 nancy.p@dairystar.com Consultant Jerry Jennissen 320-346-2292 Editorial Staff
Jennifer Coyne - Assistant Editor (320) 352-6303 • jenn@dairystar.com Danielle Nauman - Staff Writer (608) 487-1101 • danielle.n@dairystar.com Stacey Smart - Staff Writer (262) 442-6666 • stacey.s@dairystar.com Abby Wiedmeyer - Staff Writer 608-487-4812 • abby.w@dairystar.com Kate Rechtzigel - Staff Writer 507-696-9213 • kate.r@dairystar.com Grace Jeurissen - Staff Writer grace.j@star-pub.com • 320-352-6303 Maria Bichler - Copy Editor 320-352-6303 Advertising Sales Main Ofce: 320-352-6303 Fax: 320-352-5647 Deadline is 5 p.m. of the Friday the week before publication Sales Manager - Joyce Frericks 320-352-6303 • joyce@dairystar.com Mark Klaphake (Western MN) 320-352-6303 (ofce) • 320-248-3196 (cell) Laura Seljan (National Advertising, SE MN) 507-250-2217 fax: 507-634-4413 laura.s@dairystar.com Jerry Nelson (SW MN, NW Iowa, South Dakota) 605-690-6260 jerry.n@dairystar.com Bob Leukam (Northern MN, East Central MN) 320-260-1248 (cell) bob.l@star-pub.com Mike Schafer (Central, South Central MN) 320-894-7825 mike.s@dairystar.com Amanda Hoeer (Eastern Iowa, NE WI) 320-250-2884 • amanda.h@dairystar.com Megan Stuessel (Western Wisconsin) 608-387-1202 • megan.s@dairystar.com Kati Kindschuh (Northeast WI and Upper MI) 920-979-5284 • kati.k@dairystar.com Deadlines The deadline for news and advertising in the Dairy Star is 5 p.m. Friday the week before publication. Subscriptions One year subscription $40.00, outside the U.S. $200.00. Send check along with mailing address to Dairy Star, 522 Sinclair Lewis Ave., Sauk Centre, MN 56378.
ABBY WIEDMEYER/DAIRY STAR
The Peters – (from leŌ) Rory, Bryce, Russell and Roger – stand in their freestall barn March 7 at their dairy near Chaseburg, Wisconsin. The Peters family milks about 300 cows and raises calves in their newly constructed calf barn.
Barn increases consistency, saves labor for Peters family By Abby Wiedmeyer abby.w@dairystar.com
CHASEBURG, Wis. – Calves at the Peters family’s farm are nishing their rst winter of being raised in a new facility. Bryce Peters said the new system has saved on labor and increased consistency. “My philosophy is that a job should be easy enough for a 70-yearold man to do and simple enough for a high schooler to do,” Peters said. Peters farms with his two uncles,
Rory and Rogers, and his cousin, Russell. The family milks about 300 cows near Chaseburg. Calf chores are mainly handled between Peters and Roger. Rory is the herdsman, and Russell is in charge of feeding and also manages two chicken barns. The new calf barn was on the family’s wish list for a few years. It has been in operation since Thanksgiving 2021. The new facility stands 34 feet by 156 feet and houses 65 individual calf stalls. Calves are separated with free-standing boxes. The building slopes 1 inch every 12 feet from one end to the other, and both sides slope 3 inches toward the center where liquid runs down a gutter to a drain. “I wanted this to be really easy
to clean,” Peters said. “That’s why I went with the stand-alone boxes, and the whole barn is sloped.” Calves are bedded with straw and wear jackets in the colder months. Curtains adorn the sides, and the barn is equipped with tube ventilation and peak fans. The tube ventilation has been the biggest learning curve for the Peters family so far. “We used to run the tubes all the time,” Peters said. “There was too much air ow, and it got too cold in here. We lost a few calves this winter.” Now, the tubes are turned off until the weather warms up. The barn
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Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022 • Page 3
Abundant thanks to our nation’s farmers! Over the years, our business has given us a healthy appreciation for just howhard our local farmers work to nourish ourfamilies and our nation’s economy.
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Page 4 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
ConƟnued from PETERS | Page 2
has four peak fans. Two are programmed to turn on when the temperature in the barn
ing and blowing outside, but the environment is always nice in here,” Peters said. “If we had an open we would still “It seems like if you get peak, get snow in here.” said they over a certain density of mightPeters try to use the weaned calves in a pen, tubes next winter if they can gure you start nding the out how to keep the calves less than weak calves.” 3 weeks old warm enough. BRYCE PETERS, DAIRY FARMER Previously, the reaches 25 degrees, and at 40 calves were housed in three degrees, the other two kick spots at the home farm about 1 on. Peters said the closed mile away. The calves stayed peaks with fans help keep the in the calving pen where they elements out of the barn in were born for up to a week. inclement weather and allows They were then moved to a them to keep the temperature tiestall barn at the home farm. more consistent. They stayed in a pen there for “It can be cold and snow- a couple weeks before movABBY WIEDMEYER/DAIRY STAR
Calves are housed in stand-alone boxes March 7 at the Peters family farm near Chaseburg, Wisconsin. The new calf barn has allowed the Peters family to be more consistent and save Ɵme when caring for calves.
ABBY WIEDMEYER/DAIRY STAR
The new barn stands 34 feet 156 feet and houses 65 calf pens at the Peters family dairy near Chaseburg, Wisconsin.
ing again. “We were always short on space,” Peters said. “We were moving calves so many times.” The new calf barn sits adjacent to the milking facility, allowing calves to be moved from the calving pen to their individual box in the calf barn
where they stay until weaned. Calves are fed pasteurized milk with a Milk Taxi. Now that the calves are so close to the milk cows, the taxi is walked to the milkhouse. The high somatic cell cows are milked last, right into the taxi. “One thing I really want-
ed to get rid of with the old system was the 5-gallon pails,” Peters said. “We were hauling milk every day from 12-20 pails in the back of the truck. That alone saves me 45 minutes per day.” Calves are fed milk for Turn to PETERS | Page 5
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Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022 • Page 5
ConƟnued from PETERS | Page 4
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Bryce Peters looks over standard operaƟng procedures March 7 in his new calf barn near Chaseburg, Wisconsin. Peters said the new barn has saved at least 10 hours a week in labor.
90 days. When the calves are weaned, Peters removes every other divider so the calves are transitioned in pairs. “I think that makes a difference because when we wean them, nobody bellers,” Peters said. “It really helps relieve stress on the calves.” Peters said the main benets of the new facility are in the labor savings, and he estimates a time savings of 10 hours per week. Standard operating procedures are posted to help keep things consistent and simple. “When we were planning the barn, I really made sure everything was handy to do,” Peters said.
With the calves in their new home, Peters said it freed up space at the home farm where the calves were previously housed. This allowed them to make the weaned pen bigger, which has helped that age group grow. “We tripled the size of our weaning pen which really helped out,” Peters said. “It seems like if you get over a certain density of weaned calves in a pen, you start nding the weak calves. Everyone does better this way.” There are a few odds and ends to nish on the barn, but the family is looking forward to warmer weather and watching calves grow in their new facility.
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Page 6 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
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Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022 • Page 7
WARNING: (1) Scouring calves treated with antibiotics gave 1,086 pounds less milk during their first lactation.1 (2) Calves treated for pneumonia or scours are more likely to be culled or leave the herd early.2 (3) Calves treated for scours are almost three times more likely to calve after 30 months.2 (4) Higher pre-weaning average daily gain positively impacts first-lactation milk yield.1
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Page 8 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
Raise youngstock as investment, not expense
James presents new thoughts on calf nutrition By Danielle Nauman danielle.n@dairystar.com
WISCONSIN DELLS, Wis. – Many dairy farmers are rethinking the way calves are raised on their farms. Raising calves should be viewed as an investment rather than an expense according to Dr. Robert James of Virginia Tech, and he said producers need to keep in mind that in the end they will get what they pay for. That was the take-home message of James’ presentation, “Rethinking Calf Nutrition,” March 17 at the Professional Dairy Producers annual business conference in Wisconsin Dells. “The traditional view of calf nutrition is how quick can we get them weaned; let’s get that rumen developed,” James said. “The calf program is important to farm prot and sustainability. What does it really cost you to raise your calves? How do you optimize your return on that investment?” James said the time to save money
on heifer raising is not during the calfhood stage, which is the time of peak growth, but to focus on growing heifers well enough to breed and calve in on time. “I want to look at feeding calves the same way I look at feeding cows,” James said. “The goal is to meet the nutrient requirements for growth and maintenance. I want to achieve their genetic potential for growth. I want to give my calf team the tools they need to achieve success, for them to do their jobs well and to enjoy doing their jobs.” James is a rm believer in ensuring calves receive pasteurized milk or high-quality milk replacer to meet their nutritional needs for growth rather than placing emphasis on calves eating large quantities of calf starter early on. “The biology of pre-weaned calf nutrition says that calves don’t eat much starter for the rst weeks regardless of their liquid diet,” James said. “Starter is not going to contribute very much to meeting their nutrient requirements. Their maintenance requirements are higher than older, bigger animals. Let’s just forget about rumen development until after 4 weeks. That is not my goal for raising calves.” James said calves should be gaining weight by the second week of life, and he likes to see calves with body condition to help provide reserves in
the event they would become sick. James said while instinct might tell producers not to feed smaller calves as much milk, the reality is actually the opposite: Smaller calves, such as Jerseys, have higher nutritional needs for maintenance because of their smaller size. The thermoneutral point for maintenance of calves is 68 degrees Fahrenheit, which requires nearly 3 quarts of milk for body maintenance for a 100-pound calf before any nutrition is available to the calf for growth. “We have to meet their nutrient requirements,” James said. “People say they don’t want to feed all that milk to these calves, but what if you held your cows to 42 pounds of dry matter a day? What would happen to their production? Why don’t we have the same mindset with our calves.” When choosing whether to feed whole milk or milk replacer, James said the cost of each should be determined and the logistics and labor involved with each, including the cost of production and pasteurization of waste milk. When it comes to purchasing milk replacer, James said dairy farmers should buy quality milk replacer made with human-grade products. “You can do either one and be successful,” James said. Feeding whole milk provides more
fat and more protein to the calf, typically 30% fat and 26% protein on a powder basis. The drawback comes with maintaining quality and consistency. “We need to maintain the quality of that milk from the teat of the cow to the mouth of that calf, and there is where the wheels fall off the wagon,” James said. The other option to raising calves is to use custom calf growers, but James said not all calf growers are equal. “I’m seeing an evolution of two different types of calf ranches. What I call the value ones, they are more expensive, but you get what you pay for,” James said. “Then there are the lowball ones. If somebody tells me they’re going to raise your calves for $2.50 a day, … you can do it, but you are going to get what you pay for.” James’ greatest concerns about using custom calf growers are transportation and biosecurity. “What does the consumer think if you put a 2-day-old calf on a trailer and ship them 24 hours to Texas or wherever,” James said. “Don’t ask me to defend that; it’s going to be very tough to do. The other is biosecurity. What do they do to ensure the biosecurity of your animals? You have a high level of herd health, but now they are going to comingle with a bunch of other heifers.”
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Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022 • Page 9
Brad Putz • Putz Dairy
Dairy Calf & Heifer Association
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Page 10 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
Barn brings Kunze’s calves to new level
A better environment
Since that day in late August 2021, Kunze has been happy with the new calf ban. “It has been a night and day difference in our calves,” Kunze said. “Calf By Danielle Nauman health is better. We can keep danielle.n@dairystar.com their bedding drier, and it is easier feeding them. In the ABBOTSFORD, Wis. bad weather, is easier to re– For several years, Kyle ally focus on how they are Kunze has wanted to im- doing.” prove the way the calves Kunze and his wife, are raised on his dairy farm Ashley, milk 50 cows along in Abbotsford. Last sum- with their two children, mer, he took the plunge and Rosie, 3, and Hudson, 11 created a calf facility. months. “I have wanted to do this Prior to building the fafor a few years, but some- cility, Kunze housed calves thing else always seemed in hutches. to come up and caused me “About 80% of the time, those were “Calf health is better. great, but it alseemed like We can keep their ways no matter what we end up with bedding drier, and it is would some health probeasier feeding them.” lems in the cold, wet weather,” KunKYLE KUNZE, DAIRY FARMER ze said. “We are able to manage this to push building this back,” building to create a better Kunze said. “We moved the environment for both the rst group of calves in here calves and for us to care for the day before we started them.” corn silage last summer.” Kunze worked with
DANIELLE NAUMAN/DAIRY STAR
The Kunzes – Kyle, holding Hudson, Ashley and Rosie – milk 50 cows on their dairy farm near Abbotsford, Wisconsin. They built a new fabric-covered calf barn last summer.
Structures Unlimited of Stratford to design the building. A 26-by-40 structure was built and includes a fabric roof. Currently, the oor is made of packed gravel, and Kunze plans to pour a concrete oor as funds become available.
“I debated between the fabric structure and a frame-built structure,” Kunze said. “In the end, this was more economical for me at this time. The added benet is the amount of natural light in the building. Even at night, with just the
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yard light on outside, you can see inside the building well enough to check on the calves.” Before building the calf barn, Kunze visited other farms, something he highly Turn to KUNZES | Page 12
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Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022 • Page 11
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Page 12 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
ConƟnued from KUNZES | Page 10
recommends to anyone considering making changes to their facilities or building new. Kunze was condent about the stability of the structure heading into the winter, and the building has exceeded his expectations. “It hasn’t had any issues with the weather, either wind or snow,” Kunze said. “Even in the bad windstorm in mid-December, there was no concern. I would have been much more concerned about my calves being out in calf hutches during that storm.” Moving calves from the outdoors to an indoor facility can create concerns about ventilating the building to avoid respiratory issues. Kunze said the building provides natural ventilation by having two large overhead doors for equipTurn to KUNZES | Page 13
DANIELLE NAUMAN/DAIRY STAR
Calves are housed in individual pens inside a newly constructed barn at the Kunzes’ farm near Abbotsford, Wisconsin.
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Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022 • Page 13
ConƟnued from KUNZES | Page 12
ment to be driven through and for ventilation. The building features a tongue-and-groove ridge along the sides for ventilation as well. “I wanted to put in a positive-pressure air tube for additional ventilation as well but ran out of time before the cold weather set in,” Kunze said. “That is in the plans for this coming year, but honestly, the barn is doing great with the natural ventilation right now.” Agri-Plastic partitions were used to create the calf pens in the barn. Kunze has 10 individual calf pens and three group pens to begin the calves’ transition after weaning. Then, the calves are moved to the heifer shed at about 4 months. Kunze made sure the barn had ample space for storage of both feed and bedding. The barn has the exibility to add additional calf stalls. The calf barn is near the dairy barn, allowing for ease of transporting milk replacer mixed in the milkhouse and bringing newborn calves to the calf barn after birth. Even though he has only been raising calves in the barn for just over six months, Kunze has been thrilled with the results. He said calves are gaining weight well and are healthier in general. “It is so much nicer to be taking care of the calves in here,” Kunze said. “I feel like I can give them
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more attention in the bad weather and catch things earlier. In the hutches, when the wind and snow or rain where whipping, you would just keep your head down and get things done. Now, I feel like I can really watch them more.”
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Page 14 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
TRI-START JR+
Performance Proven + Latest Research + Easy Application To support your calf’s developing immune system, look to Tri-Start Jr+ (paste form). Developed using the latest calf research, the unique formulation of Tri-Start Jr+ is designed to boost your calf’s immune system at birth. The ingredient combination below helps improve rumen function and health by establishing microbial populations, which crowd out pathogens. • 20 billion viable colony forming units (CFU) of naturally occurring microorganisms selected specifically for young calves • Short-chain fatty acid included to optimize absorption • Egg protein antibodies protect the calf from specific pathogens • Vitamins B, C and E and selenium yeast support immune system development
Contact your local cooperative’s calf care specialist to learn more today!
Kayla Frieler
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®Your Success Our Passion. is a registered trademark of Select Sires Inc. Buyer assumes all responsibility for use, storage and handling of this product. All claims, representations, and warranties, expressed or implied, are made only by the company responsible for manufacturing and not by Select Sires Inc., its member cooperatives, its agents or employees. Tri-Start Jr+ is manufactured for Select Sires Inc., 11740 US 42N, Plain City, OH 43064.
Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022 • Page 15
We have the right equipment for you! SPREADERS Available in Sizes from 320-1520 Cu. Ft.
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Page 16 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
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Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022 • Page 17
Know when to breed a heifer
Weight, not age affects production performance By Danielle Nauman danielle.n@dairystar.com
Raising heifers is one of the biggest investments a dairy farmer can make, and the wait to reap a return on that investment by a heifer entering the milking herd can seem long. Making the investment as efcient as possible without sacricing the heifer’s future production can be a ne line. Megan Lauber discussed that during her a presentation as part of a University of Wisconsin Extension Badger Dairy Insight webinar entitled “Managing Heifer MaMegan Lauber turity Pre- and Post-Breeding.” University of Lauber is a UW-Madison Wisconsin dairy science graduate research assistant in dairy reproductive physiology under Dr. Paul Fricke. Lauber shared information about breeding heifers by weight versus breeding by age. “Heifer rearing is costly,” Lauber said. “To get this heifer from this non-productive, non-lactating state to grow and develop her to become a productive member of the herd, on average, is about $2,500, including the value of the calf. About 50% of the total rearing cost is feed. Raising heifers is truly an investment and a very costly one.” To help mitigate the cost of investment, Lauber said many herds have tried to decrease the age at rst calving, which has lowered the average age at
rst calving. state, they are going to take that time to grow during “2017 survey data reported an average age of their lactation, which honestly is a very costly way 24.5 months, which may be even less now in 2022,” to grow heifers rather than growing them before Lauber said. “We are starting to see a lot of herds they calve in.” try calving at 22 months of age, but we see the greatest economic return is associated with an age at rst calving at 23 to 24 months of age.” Lauber said data suggests the effect of weight rather than age is making a greater impact on the animal’s rst lactation. Based on an average mature weight of 1,500 pounds, the goal is to be breeding heifers at approximately 55% of that mature weight, or at 825 pounds. Ideally, those heifers would be at 85% of that mature weight, or 1,275 pounds, after calv- MEGAN LAUBER, UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSINǧMADISON ing. Lauber said data was extracted from a dairy milking nearly 6,700 Holsteins. At the dairy, the To help heifers achieve the desired weight and rst-lactation production levels maintained the same intervals based on weight rather than on age. Re- maturity benchmarks for insemination and calving, gardless of the heifers’ age (21, 22 or 23 months Lauber recommended producers choose the quality or greater), heifers that calved in heavier produced of their heifers over quantity. “We have tools to really manage our heifer inan average of 11 to 12 pounds more milk per day than heifers that did not meet the 85% mature body ventories to keep only the heifers we nd value in,” Lauber said. “Once we determine the genetically weight benchmark. “What was interesting with this dataset is that elite heifers we want to keep, we need to implement weight seems to be the bigger impact rather than aggressive growth programs to get them to our tarage,” Lauber said. “We can have this rst lactation get weights. We need to identify what the standard cow calve in at 21 months of age and still achieve for maturity is within our herds.” Once a strategy for reaching the 55% magreat milk production; that it is the weight rather ture bodyweight benchmark for insemination is than the age.” Can heifers that calve in below the 85% mature achieved, Lauber suggests implementing aggressive weight benchmark ever catch up on the milk pro- reproductive management tools to get heifers induction lost in the rst lactation? Lauber said, based seminated quickly after reaching the target weight, on the dataset she looked at, there is a substantial reducing the age at rst calving and shortening the spread in milk production per cow per day in the time heifers are non-lactating herd members. “This all gets back to reducing the costs of the second and subsequent lactations as well. “It seems that there really is no catch-up peri- rearing period by having more heifers inseminated od,” Lauber said. … “If these heifers are not given and reducing the days on feed,” Lauber said. the opportunity to grow during their non-lactating
“If these heifers are not given the opportunity to grow during their non-lactating state, they are going to take that time to grow during their lactation ....”
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• GERTKEN’S SALES Richmond, MN • 320-597-2207 • FARMER’S CO-OP Lafayette, MN • 507-228-8224 • NEW ULM FEED STORE New Ulm, MN •507-359-7500 • STEVE’S FEED Sleepy Eye, MN • 507-794-3831 • AGRI-TECH Watertown, SD • 605-882-7015 Brookings, SD • 605-692-0955 • GILMAN CO-OP CREAMERY Gilman, MN • 320-387-2770
Page 18 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
DAIRY CALENDAR
The Dairy Calf & Heifer Association is excited to announce that the 2022 Annual Conference & Trade Show will be held April 12-14, 2022, in Bloomington, MN. Optional tours for the conference include: “Maternity, calves and employees”: Scheps Dairy provides a look at a spacious maternity set up for cows, calves and employees. Minimal stress for calves sets them up for paired housing life. Minglewood Dairy showcases two autofeeders, with years of sideby-side feeding both whole milk and milk replacer, with a recent switch to milk replacer. A high-volume feeding system, attendees will be able to see how this strategy has performed well for the expansion of the herd. “Looking forward: Reproduction, facilities, social media”: We will discuss IVF and embryo ushing as well as what makes Bomaz Farms repro successful. We will then head to Jon-De Farm to view their new calf facilities and talk about what prompted that change. We will wrap up the tour with ModFarmChick. “Beef x Dairy: From hutch to rail”: Mark and Theresa Larson of Farmington, MN, show that simplicity should never be underrated when custom raising heifers and raising beef cross steers. Larsons raise heifers from 0-6 months for a 400-cow dairy, as well as raise all the bull calves to nish in their own operation. Following the tour of their farm, head to the University of Minnesota Meat Science Lab to discuss and see carcasses from various nished beef, beef/dairy crosses, and dairy steers.
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Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022 • Page 19
We have what you need to grow your calves!
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Page 20 • Dairy Star Special Edition • Saturday, March 26, 2022
FIBERGLASS FENCING • GATES • FREESTALLS • FEED RAIL • FEED LOTS Ventilation for Calves
PATENT PENDING
Fiberglass freestalls offer a heightened level of comfort which can lead to an increase in milk production!
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New additive in our paint now prevents & protects against the growth of mold & mildew.
• 1’’ & 1-1/4 Electric Fence Post UV Protected •13% Chrome Post for Head Locks & Feed Rail • Guard Rail and Fiberglass posts. • Lifetime warranty on our fiberglass products from rusting and rotting
“We installed freestalls and gates from TJ Fencing after seeing how reasonably priced they are compared to other options. I will never install a steel post again either after using their posts which will never rust. I really like the products I have from TJ Fencing and plan to put more of their freestalls in my next barn.” - KG4 Farms, Ridgeway IA “The fencing looks great, is easy to maintain, it lasts forever and the people are great to work with!” - Stempfle Holsteins, Maynard, IA
NEW PRODUCTS:
“These gates are very simple to take apart, like calf huts, only bigger. We put 1-3 calves in a pen, which gets them accustomed to group housing. Ventilation is better for the calves having an open pen.We are very happy with our investment in the gates.” Top Deck Holsteins-Westgate, IA - Jason, Derek, Justin Decker
“We built our new ABS Global Calf Facility in the summer of 2016. This was the first time we utilized anything except steel at one of our facilities and it was a hard sell to the staff. However, after meeting with Travis at TJ’s Fencing in Harpers Ferry, and having him bring a gate home to show the staff, we were sold. We utilize more than 200 different sizes of gates, all purchased from TJ’s Fencing and installed by Cliff’s Incorporated from Friesland, Wis. The gating is holding up very well. We intend to expand our calf facility this summer and will definitely continue utilizing TJ’s Fencing for the gating.” - Jim Meronek, Health Assurance, Production and Supply Chain Director ABS Global, Inc., DeForest, WI
Hwy. 76 • Harpers Ferry, IA
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FAMILY OWNED FOR OVER 30 YEARS!