High bed feeding milk goat

Feeding the dairy goats on a high bed can not only be restricted by pastures, but also increase the milk production and the sanitation quality of fresh milk, and can also reduce the occurrence of diseases. Its feeding methods and technical requirements are as follows: 1. Sheep house requirements. The sheep house is built in a place with high dryness and unobstructed drainage. The direction of the sheep house and the design of the building are based on the principle of ventilation in summer and warmth in winter. The floor should be properly sloped, and the floor slope below the screen should be 10-15 degrees to clean the excreta. There must be a certain area of ​​windows on both sides of the sheep house to allow air convection in Lishe to ensure fresh air. Second, high-bed construction. The high bed is built at a height of 1 to 1.5 meters above the ground, and high bed nets can be paved with planks of 34 cm or 45 cm. Leave a gap of 1 to 1.5 centimeters between wooden planks to facilitate leakage of urine. The high beds can be fenced into 4 to 6 square meters of small oysters so that they can be grouped and managed according to the conditions of the sheep. Each sheep needs high bed area, adult ewes 1 to 1.2 square meters, young ewe 0.6 to 0.8 square meters, and lambs 0.3 to 0.5 square meters. The area of ​​the playground is 2 to 3 times of the area of ​​the sheep house. Third, lactating sheep feeding and management. (1) Laying period: Observing the clinical response of the ewes to make various preparations for the delivery room and confinement. Lambs are fed high quality feed after lambing. (2) Early lactation: The ewes should be restored to their initial strength during the first 20 days after delivery. Within 6 days after delivery, feed digestible high quality hay and a small amount of mixed concentrate. Gradually increasing silage or multigrain grass after 6 days. After 14 days, the concentrate was increased to the normal feed level. Generally, the ewes with a body weight of 50 kg were fed with 0.6 kg of concentrate each day. (3) The peak period of lactation: 20 to 120 days after childbirth is the peak period of lactation. Every day, each sheep is fed 50 to 80 grams of concentrate, which increases with the increase of milk production until the milk production no longer increases. After 5 to 7 days of maintenance, the animals were fed with the standard supply at the early stage of milk secretion. (4) Stabilizing period of lactation: 120 to 210 days after delivery, the ewes are stable during lactation, and feeding and feeding methods should be avoided as far as possible. Feed more green and juicy feed to ensure drinking water supply. (5) Late lactation: Postpartum 210 to dry period is the late lactation period, also the pre-pregnancy period. Although fetal growth during this period is not large, but requires a comprehensive nutritional feed, fine material should not be too quickly reduced, to reduce the production of milk before the reduction of fine material, otherwise it will affect fetal development. (6) Dry-milk period: After 10 months of lactation and 3 months of pregnancy, the ewes consume large amounts of nutrients and stop the milk from entering the dry period to restore their strength. The fetus grows fast during dry period and requires a supply of low moisture, high dry matter, protein-rich feed, and attention to calcium, phosphorus, and vitamins. Forty days before the dry period, 50 kilograms of ewes are fed 1 kilogram of high-quality leguminous hay, such as loquat and gardenia, 2.5 kg of silage corn stalk, and 0.5 kg of mixed condiment; 20 days after the dry period. Increase the amount of concentrate feed and appropriately reduce the amount of roughage feed. The 60 kilograms of ewes are fed 0.6 to 0.8 kg of mixed concentrate per day.

Feed Phosphorous

Feed Phosphorous,Monocalcium Phosphate,Tricalcium Phosphate Feed Grade

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