Drought-stricken
Corn can be Grazed with Caution
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With plentiful supplies of drought-stricken corn and a shortage of
pasture in some areas for grazing livestock, many farmers think of
green chopping their corn that won’t make grain.
That is like playing with dynamite, warns Rob Kallenbach, University
of Missouri forage agronomist. Feeding high-nitrate greenchop to cattle
is extremely risky.
“We'll be getting calls from farmers who have cattle with four
legs in the air,” he said.
Corn that doesn’t make a full ear can build nitrates in the
stalks because there is no water to move nitrogen into the kernels.
For greenchop, a silage cutter is used to harvest all of the corn
plant, including stalks with leaves and whatever ears develop.
Nitrates can poison livestock, Kallenbach said. However if the corn
is chopped and stored in a silage wagon, even for a short time, the
nitrate turns into the more deadly nitrite.
“Nitrites are about a hundred times more poisonous than nitrates,”
Kallenbach said. “Nitrites kill quickly by blocking oxygen in
the blood stream.”
He describes a typical scenario for disaster: A farmer chops a load
of corn in the evening, and then allows the feed to sit on the wagon
overnight before feeding it the next day. In that time, nitrates covert
to nitrites.
With caution, drought corn can be used for livestock feed, Kallenbach
said, if animals are allowed to do the selecting.
“This is where simpler is better,” Kallenbach said. A
small section of a cornfield is divided off with a single strand of
electric fence and the cows are turned in to graze.
Left on their own, cows will graze the upper leaves, the husks and
whatever corn is available. In most cases, the nitrate is stored in
the thick lower stalks, which are less palatable.
Unless forced to eat the entire cornstalk, cows will avoid the poisonous
lower part of the plant, Kallenbach said.
No great expense is involved in strip grazing a cornfield, Kallenbach
said. It requires an electric fence charger, some step-in fence posts,
and a roll of polywire or electric fencing.
A one-day supply of feed is fenced off, and the cattle are moved to
fresh feed each day by moving the fence further down the field.
“A farmer can quickly determine the amount of feed to fence
off by observing how much was eaten the first day,” Kallenbach
said.
Some producers limit grazing of drought corn on the first day. Cows
are allowed into the corn for a couple of hours at first, then grazing
time gradually is increased.
To build the grazing paddock, Kallenbach recommends running an ATV
or tractor down through the cornfield, to knock down cornstalks. That
makes it easier to build an electric fence without it shorting out
on the corn. Downed corn also allows cows to see the hot wire.
The same grazing practice can be used for a soybean field that doesn’t
set pods.
Soybeans make very good forage, almost as good as alfalfa in nutrition,
the forage specialist said. “Soybeans originally were brought
to this country as a hay crop.”
Large areas of central and northeast Missouri have crop fields that
did not set seed because of heat and dry weather at pollination time.
“Often the first thought is to chop that damaged corn for feed
or for silage,” Kallenbach said. “But it is a lot less
expensive to allow the livestock to harvest the feed.” Corn
fields can be grazed into winter. ©