June 18, 2018

 

First calving at age 2 can cut cost of rearing

 

 

The average cost of rearing a heifer goes up significantly the longer it takes them to calve for the first time, a research conducted by the Royal Veterinary College in London and funded by AHDB has found.

 

Speaking at the final meeting of the UK levy body Agriculture & Horticulture Development Board's "Calf to Calving" initiative in Aberdeen, Scotland, Farm Consultancy Group dairy consultant Andy Dodd explained: "At 24 months the cost is approximately £1,500 to rear a heifer, but that rises to £1,800 if they calve at 26 months, and can be over £3,000 if they don't have their first calf until 32 months.

 

"There are also many other benefits to calving younger; the cow's lifespan is longer, they need less calving assistance throughout their lives and they supply substantially more milk over their lifetime."

 

RVC statistics showed that heifers that calve at two years give on average 25,000 litres of milk throughout their first five years, while those calving two months later give just 20,400 litres.

 

The figures also showed that longevity is increased—heifers calving at 24 months have a 62% chance of still being alive at five years old, while those that calve at 26 months only have a 41% chance of surviving past their fifth year.

 

At the meeting at Glasgoforest Farm, Dodd recommended several ways of reaching the two-year target including regular weighing to guide feed management.

 

Investing in weigh scales

 

Many farmers involved in the Calf to Calving programme, including Anne and William Willis, invested in weigh scales after seeing the benefits.

 

Anne said: "At the first meeting we quickly realised how inaccurate guessing weight by sight was. A nutritionist thought our heifers were underweight and recommended extra feed, but when we weighed them we found they were 10% ahead of target.

 

"Without accurate information on their weights, we would have fed them extra and so taken on an additional and completely unnecessary cost."

 

One of the most important tenets of managing age at first calving is understanding mature herd weight as heifers should be 85% of that weight post calving.

 

"Once you know the mature herd weight you are aiming for, you can set targets across the 24 months," Dodd said. "For example, heifers need to be 50% of their mature weight at 12 months, and 55-60% of their mature weight at 14 months.

 

"The good thing about understanding your targets and monitoring progress is you can always make changes along the way. If you find at 12 months old they are significantly over- or underweight there's no need to panic, just readjust your management, whether by feeding more or less, or changing your feed completely, you can get them back on track."

 

Calf to Calving farms are part of AHDB's wider Farm Excellence Platform, which inspires industry to improve performance and succeed through farmer-to-farmer knowledge exchange.

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