▶How do I recognize a sick animal early?
A sick animal often shows a combination of signs: loss of appetite, standing apart from the herd, reduced milk or growth, dull eyes, rough coat, lameness, or cough. Check temperature (normal range 99-102°F for cattle, 101-103°F for sheep), rumen fill (feel the left side for distension), and manure consistency. Call a veterinarian at the first signs rather than waiting for obvious illness; early treatment is cheaper and more effective. Keep a health log recording treatments, outcomes, and response times for future reference.
▶What is body condition scoring and why does it matter?
Body condition scoring (BCS) uses a visual and tactile assessment (typically 1-9 scale) to evaluate if an animal is too thin, ideal, or obese. Run your hand along the ribs and spine: you should feel ribs easily but not see them prominently. Thin animals (BCS 3-4) have reduced fertility and disease resistance; obese animals (BCS 8-9) are prone to metabolic disease. Optimal BCS is 5-7, managed through feed amount, forage quality, and seasonal adjustments. Score a sample of animals monthly to track herd average and adjust feed.
▶How do I design a balanced ration for my animals?
A balanced ration provides energy (measured in megacalories), protein, fiber, vitamins, and minerals appropriate to the animal's age and stage (growing, producing milk, gestation). For cattle: growing calves need 14-18% crude protein and ad-lib forage plus grain; dairy cows in peak lactation need 16-18% protein and high-quality hay or silage. Use feed tags and composition tables (USDA, extension) to calculate percentages. Most farmers hire a nutritionist for $50-100 to formulate a ration; it usually saves more in feed waste and health than it costs.
▶What is biosecurity and how do I prevent disease outbreaks?
Biosecurity is the system of practices preventing disease entry into and spread within your herd: visitors wear clean clothes and boots, equipment is disinfected between animals, new animals are quarantined for 2-3 weeks, dead animals are disposed of promptly, and housing is cleaned regularly. Vaccinate against regionally endemic diseases (blackleg, clostridial vaccines for cattle; CDT for goats). Keep separate water and feed for sick animals. Isolate sick animals immediately. These practices are cheap and prevent devastating losses (a disease outbreak can kill 20-50% of a herd).
▶How do I handle animals safely and humanely?
Animals sense fear and rough handling; calm, consistent pressure works best. Use low-stress handling: move slowly, use verbal cues, avoid sudden noise, and design handling facilities with a gentle curve chute that prevents panicking. Never yell or strike—a quiet voice and patience reduce stress-induced bruising and injury. Wear sturdy boots and long pants, never get between an animal and its escape route, and keep children supervised. A well-designed handling facility (funnel gates, curved chute, squeeze) makes every process faster and safer.
▶What is the feed-to-gain ratio and how is it managed?
Feed-to-gain (or feed efficiency) is the amount of feed (dry matter) an animal consumes to gain one pound of weight—ideally 4-6 lbs feed per 1 lb gain for beef cattle, 2-3 for fish, 3-4 for poultry. Efficiency declines as animals age and approach market weight. Improve it by optimizing forage quality, matching protein to growth stage, and minimizing waste (wet hay, trampled feed). Weigh animals monthly and track feed intake to calculate actual ratios and spot opportunities (a 1 lb change in efficiency saves $50-100 per animal by market).
▶When do I use pasture versus confinement feeding?
Pasture is ideal for cattle, sheep, and goats (lower cost, higher animal welfare, smaller carbon footprint) but is seasonal and climate-dependent. Confinement (feedlots, barns) is used during winter or in arid regions, offers feed control and waste management, but requires more labor and infrastructure. Most farms use both: pasture in spring-summer, confinement in fall-winter. Rotational grazing (moving animals frequently to fresh forage) maximizes pasture efficiency and parasite control compared to continuous grazing.