Grant County Producer E-Newsletter

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NDSU EXTENSION

Grant County Producer Update, Dec. By Tessa Osterbauer, Grant County Agriculture and Natural Resources Agent

Contents: Christmas Giveaway Cow Fertility, Pregnancy Rates

Dakota Gardener, Holiday Cacti

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Yield Impact of N Application on corn

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Christmas Crossword

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Crossword Answers

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Tessa (Keller) Osterbauer NDSU Agent Agricultural & Natural Resources

NDSU Resources: https://www.ag.ndsu.edu/ grantcountyextension https://www.facebook.com/ GrantCountyExtensionService/ Contact Information Extension Office 106 2nd Ave NE Carson, ND 58529-0137

Christmas Giveaway I think we can all agree 2020 has been a tough year on us all. With Christmas rapidly approaching, our Extension staff decided we would like to spread a little holiday cheer from our office to your home. That’s why this year the Extension office is having a Christmas Giveaway! Prizes will be Christmas themed and determined based on how many entries we receive. To enter simply send in or drop off one of our four Christmas word puzzles along with the entry from. Puzzles and entry forms can be picked up at the Extension office or found online at: https://www.ag.ndsu.edu/ grantcountyextension/events/2020christmas-giveaway-information Giveaway Information By submitting this entry form you will be entered into a drawing for our Christmas giveaway prizes. Entries will be accepted December 7th – 18th, any entries and puzzles received after the 18th will not be accepted. Drop off word puzzles and entry forms at the Grant County Extension office (can leave in an envelope for the Extension office in the drop-box out front of courthouse if the office is closed), or mail to PO Box 137, Carson, ND 58529-0137. If you complete all four word puzzles, your name will be entered four times into the drawing. Completed puzzles do NOT have to have all the correct answers to be entered. Answers will be posted at https://www.ag.ndsu.edu/grantcountyextension/ events/2020-christmas-giveaway-information on December 21st. This giveaway is open to anyone and there is no age limit. If you are entering youth and would like to submit your entry for a more age appropriate prize, please indicate age on the entry form. Winners will be announced the week of Dec. 21 – 25th via Facebook, email and contacted by the Extension office. Call the Extension office at 701-622-3470 if you have any questions.

And have a very Merry Christmas!!

Phone: 701.622.3470 Fax: 701.622.3717

https://www.ag.ndsu.edu/grantcountyextension 1


Cow Fertility, Pregnancy Rate Important Economic Numbers Beef cow pregnancy rates are important numbers to track. Reproduction is the most important economic trait in a beef cow herd. “Selling more calves as it relates to cows exposed and cow input costs is a greater indication of business success than any other production parameter,” says Gerald Stokka, North Dakota State University Extension veterinarian and livestock stewardship specialist. “Unfortunately, the majority of our expected progeny differences measure production traits not related to reproduction, while the index values focus on gross revenue, not input costs.” Take, for example, a 300-cow herd with a 15% open rate and a normal average of 5%. The open rate is 10% higher than normal. This means that 270 cows must assume the cost of maintaining 300 cows. If cow costs on an annual basis are $700, then each of the 270 pregnant cows will pick up the tab for $778. Easy answers to reducing the rate of open cows, such as changing vaccination protocols, usually are misguided and don’t address the fundamental reasons for low pregnancy rates, according to Stokka.

such a vibrio or trichomoniasis.

What is the number of

calves born related to the number of cows determined to be with calf at the previous pregnancy checking event? This number could indicate fetal loss due to abortions not noticed, or obvious abortions and stillbirths. This can be evidence of fetal infections such as BVDV, IBR, leptospirosis, Neospora, fungal infections and a host of other possible pathogens. In addition, fetal losses can be due to high nitrates in forage resources.

What is the cow BCS and by age? Younger cows (2- and 3-year-

olds) and cows more than 12 years old generally will carry less condition than middle-aged cows. This will have a direct relationship to the ability to rebreed and conceive for the next season because young cows still are growing and lactating, and older cows will have more difficulty staying in condition because most of their incisor teeth will be missing.

Here is information producers need to investigate this problem:

What are the cow and bull ages and numbers by pasture? Herds with younger or older cows in common pastures regardless of bull numbers generally will have a greater number of open cows. The number of cows exposed per bull is important, but perhaps even more important is bull age. Older and more dominant bulls tend to serve the majority of cows, so the number of bulls may not be as important as the age of all the bulls in a pasture. Running two 14- to 16-monthold bulls with a single dominant older bull counts as three bulls. However, in reality, the herd may have only 1.5 bulls because the dominant bull dominates the breeding. All bulls should have had a bull semen evaluation prior to the breeding season.

What time of the year is calving season? Late winter/earlier spring calving requires more energy in the diet to prepare cows to be rebred during the breeding season. Late spring/ summer calving cows may experience a decrease in forage quality in late July and August, which can impact fertility.

“Beef cow pregnancy and weaning rates are important numbers to track,” Stokka says. “High numbers without increased input costs are related to profitability and sustainability of the ranch business. Work with your veterinarian and nutritionist in herds where appropriate benchmarks or goals of these rates have not been achieved.”

“Meaningful discussion to find solutions requires a systematic approach to practical management recommendations,” he says. “Veterinarians need to have access to production information related to calving dates, pregnancy checking information by fetal age, cow body condition scores (BCS), cow BCS by age, cow age, cow age by pasture information, bull age and cows exposed per bull, length of the breeding season, and biosecurity of the herd related to purchases, exposure to the main herd and exposures to neighboring cattle.”

What is the calving season distribution, or when are the majority of calves born? Is it the first 21 days, the first 45 days, the last 30 days or scattered throughout the calving season? This information provides some evidence of inadequate bull power, which may be related to dominant bulls, lame bulls, injured bulls or inadequate BCS and cow nutrition during the breeding season. A large number of cows determined to be pregnant late in the breeding season could be an indication of reproductive disease 2

Do you make biosecurity and vaccination a priority? All purchased and additions to the herd should have a testing and vaccination history. If not, then implement quarantine procedures. Even with testing and vaccination, do not introduce new additions into the herd just prior to the start of the calving season.

Source: Gerald Stokka, gerald.stokka@ndsu.edu Editor: Ellen Crawford, ellen.crawford@ndsu.edu

Grant County Extension, December 2020


Dakota Gardener: Holiday Cacti By Carrie Knutson, NDSU Extension Agent, Grand Forks County

bloom. The plants require different spans of long nights to bloom. The plants will bloom naturally around the holiday for which they are named. Thanksgiving cacti are the most common. They easily re-bloom without any extra effort on your part. They frequently are labeled and sold as Christmas cacti around the holiday season. Christmas cacti might require a little more care to bloom. The plant will need complete darkness for at least 12 hours and cooler night time temperatures of 60 to 65 F to bloom.

Holiday cacti can live a long time with proper care. When I started in Extension many years ago, I took a cutting from a co-worker’s Christmas cactus. The plant grew extremely well. In fact, it has taken over the top of my file cabinet and frequently gets pinched when I shut drawers. The plant loves to be left alone and it has rewarded me with spectacular magenta pink blooms late November or early December. How can you tell what type of holiday cactus you have? We have three main groups of holiday cacti. They are Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas cacti. These cacti have many hybrids and cultivars. They frequently are grouped together and are confused easily unless you know what to look for. The secret lies in the stems. Thanksgiving cacti have pointed, clawshaped stem edges. The Christmas cacti have scalloped stem edges and the Easter cacti have rounded, smooth stems. If you are like me and need more of a visual guide to identify what type of cactus you have, check out the video by Calla Edwards, a North Dakota State University Extension agent in McLean County, on our Facebook page, https:// www.facebook.com/NDSUExtLGT.

Easter cacti will bloom later in the winter as daylight increases and temperatures warm. The Easter cactus requires the longest span of long nights to bloom. Regardless of what type, holiday cacti are excellent houseplants. These plants can live a very long time under proper care. Holiday cacti are not native to the desert. They come from the rainforests. The plants prefer moist, well-drained soil and bright indirect light, and benefit from fertilizer during the summer. The plants don’t like to be moved, especially when they are blooming. So what type do I have? Well, mine is indeed a Christmas cactus. It really must like my office because it blooms reliably ever year with no extra effort from me. Happy gardening! For more information about gardening, contact your local NDSU Extension agent. Find the Extension office for your county at https://www.ag.ndsu.edu/ extension/directory/counties.

Another key identification characteristic is the season in which the plants naturally 3

Grant County Extension, December 2020


Yield Impact of N Applied to Corn at Tasseling Objectives:

Verify whether N fertilization at tasseling (VT) would improve corn yields in North Dakota Assess whether yield response to split N will differ between dryland and irrigated corn Determine if improved yields would justify the cost of late N application?

Methods: Two trials were conducted on dryland and under irrigation at Oakes, and one under

Under irrigation, split application of 120 lbs N produced higher yields than a single application at planting. The split N treatment that received 40 lbs as starter, 40 lbs at V8, and 40 lbs at VT (40-40-40) produced the best yield at 120 lbs N total (Fig 1). It is probable that when the fertilizer was split, it prevented some N loss due to leaching. The soil is well drained; frequent irrigation would have probably moved some of the N below the reach of the roots (leaching). On dryland, application of all 120 lbs N at planting produced the highest

irrigation at Carrington, ND. 14 fertilizer treatments were applied. The first six N

yield when

treatments were pre-plant N at 0, 40, 80,

received beddings in fall the previous year, some of the N may have been tied up,

120, 160, and 200 lbs N/ac. Eight other

and as a result, much N needed to be availability early and throughout the growing

treatments were splits that either received

season.

compared to split application treatments (Fig 2). Because the dryland field had

0 lbs, 40 lbs, or 80 lbs N as starter, plus 40 lbs N top-dress at either V8 or at tasseling (VT). Results

Yields responded positively to N at Oakes. Yields did not respond to N at Carrington; thus, the split N results were not important.

Maximum yield at Oakes was 259 bushels at 200 lbs N under irrigation, and 195 bushels at 200 lbs N on dryland. Yields were not significantly different between 200 and 120 lbs N either under irrigation (227 bushels) or on dryland (186 bushels).

Even though split application of N at a total rate of 120 lbs N did not result in statistical yield differences the response to split N application was different between the irrigated and dryland sites.

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Conclusion

In environments of high rainfall or where irrigation practiced, split application of N would be recommended to minimize N loss to leaching. Due to lack of significant yield differences between the single and split N applications it would have been uneconomical to have applied N later in the growing season. Nonetheless, splitapplication of N with most of the N applied at planting, and the rest around V6 to V8 remains a safe strategy to minimize N loss and enhance N fertilizer use efficiency in corn.

Source: Jasper Teboh, Ph.D. Jasper.Teboh@ndsu.edu Grant County Extension, December 2020


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Grant County Extension, December 2020


North Dakota State University NDSU EXTENSION | GRANT COUNTY

Answers

Courthouse | 106 2nd Ave NE PO Box 137 Carson ND 58529-0137

We love to hear your ideas and feedback! If you have any comments, questions, concerns or just want to talk please feel free to contact me, Tessa (Keller) Osterbauer at the Extension Office, 701-622-3470 or email Tessa.osterbauer@ndsu.edu.

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Grant County Extension, December 2020


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