Outwintering livestock: Implementation

Ensuring livestock receive balanced nutrition in bale-grazing systems is essential for maintaining their health, productivity and maintenance. It can be helpful to analyse your deferred grazing and hay as this will provide valuable insights into the quality of the diets and their suitability for your livestock.

Forage analysis and dietary recommendations

Use the results from forage analysis to inform your dietary choices to support the nutritional needs of your cattle at different stages.

Suckler cows (maintenance requirement) need a minimum of 9% crude protein (CP) and 9 MJ ME/kg DM to sustain body condition.

Growing and finishing youngstock need more nutrients, with a target of 11–13% CP and 10–12 MJ ME/kg DM, depending on growth stage and target weight gain.

Deferred grass

  • Sufficient to meet maintenance needs for protein and energy
  • May not provide adequate ME to support significant growth or finishing

Hay

  • Lower-quality hay (e.g. 7.1 MJ ME/kg DM and 7.6% CP) falls short of maintenance requirements if fed alone
  • When combined with deferred grass, hay contributes to a balanced diet that meets livestock needs

Feed budgeting using bales and deferred grass

Feed budgeting is essential to ensure livestock have adequate forage throughout the winter.

By combining bales and deferred grass, you can strike a balance between feed supply and grazing demand while minimising feed waste and pasture damage.

How to plan and manage feed efficiently

The first step in feed budgeting is calculating how much forage your livestock will need.

This depends on several factors, including the type and number of animals, their body weight and expected intake.

The dietary requirements of a mature cow during the winter period depend on factors such as pregnancy status, body condition score (BCS), breed and environmental conditions. Nutritional targets include:

Energy requirements (metabolisable energy (ME))

  • Dry cows (maintenance): 9 MJ ME/kg DM
  • Pregnant cows (mid to late gestation): 10–11 MJ ME/kg DM (increasing in late gestation)
  • Lactating cows (early lactation): 11–12.5 MJ ME/kg DM

Energy intake must support maintenance, pregnancy and lactation, while also taking into account colder weather, which increases energy demands due to heat loss.

Protein requirements (crude protein (CP))

  • Dry cows: > 9% CP
  • Pregnant cows (mid gestation): 10–11% CP
  • Late-gestation and lactating cows: 11–13% CP

Estimate available forage

Next, calculate the total forage available from both deferred grass and bales. 

Deferred grass

Before the start of winter, paddocks should be rested to build up forage reserves.

Ideally, deferred grass should have 3,000–4,000 kg of dry matter (DM) per hectare. Measure pasture cover in the autumn to estimate the available DM.

For example, if you have 10 hectares with 3,500 kg DM/ha, the total available deferred forage is 35,000 kg DM. However, you need to take residue into consideration. 

Hay bales

When using hay bales, calculate the amount of DM provided by each bale.

A typical 4-foot round bale weighs approximately 400–450 kg fresh weight, with around 80–85% DM content. One of these bales would, therefore, provide 320–380 kg DM.

Match supply to demand 

Now that you know how much forage your livestock will need, and how much you have available, you need to match the supply to the demand. 

Forage allocation

If you plan to use both deferred grass and bales, divide the total available feed into daily or weekly allocations.

For example, if you have 100 cows needing 1,500 kg DM per day, you could allocate part of that from deferred grass and part from bales.

If your deferred grass provides 30 kg DM per hectare per day, and you have two hectares, you will need to make up the remaining 1,440 kg with hay bales (about four or five bales per day).

Daily dry matter (DM) and energy requirements

Livestock typically consume 2–3% of their body weight in dry matter per day.

A 640 kg cow requires approximately 13–19 kg DM/day.

Energy requirement:

Energy requirements are expressed in megajoules of metabolisable energy (MJ ME) per day. For maintenance:

  • A 640 kg cow requires approximately 77 MJ ME/day
  • Additional energy may be needed for pregnancy, lactation or cold-weather stress

Duration of feeding:

Multiply the daily DM and energy requirements by the number of outwintering days.

For 120 days of outwintering, a 640 kg cow therefore needs:

  • 16 kg DM/day x 120 days = 1,920 kg DM total
  • 77 MJ ME/day x 120 days = 9,240 MJ ME total

Estimate available forage and energy

Evaluate forage supplies for both DM and energy content.

Deferred grass

Grass energy content varies but typically ranges from 9–11 MJ ME/kg DM.

Assume deferred grass provides 10 MJ ME/kg DM.

If you have 10 ha of deferred grass with 3,500 kg DM/ha, the total available energy is:

3,500 kg DM/ha x 10 ha = 35,000 kg DM

However, assuming a 60% utilisation rate (meaning 40% is left as residue):

  • 35,000 kg DM x 0.60 = 21,000 kg DM available
  • 21,000 kg DM x 10 MJ ME/kg DM = 210,000 MJ ME

Hay bales fed on the ground

Hay energy content varies from 8–10 MJ ME/kg DM, depending on quality. Assume a typical bale provides 9 MJ ME/kg DM.

If hay bales are fed on the ground with a 65-75% utilisation rate, the available dry matter (DM) and energy. Therefore, 75% of the bale is consumed instead of 100%.

A 4-foot round bale weighing 400 kg fresh weight with 75% DM contains:

  • 400 kg x 0.85 DM = 340 kg DM

Adjust for 75% utilisation

  • 340 kg DM×0.75 = 255 kg DM available

Calculate available energy

  • 255 kg DM x 9 MJ ME/kg DM = 2,295 MJ ME/bale

So, each bale provides 255 kg of usable DM and 2,295 MJ ME when fed on the ground at 75% utilisation.

If hay is fed on the ground, utilisation rates typically range from 50% to 75%, depending on factors such as:

  • Weather conditions (wet/muddy conditions increase waste).
  • Stocking density (higher density can lead to more trampling and fouling).
  • Feeding frequency (daily feeding reduces waste compared to ad lib feeding).

Forage allocation

Allocate forage and energy resources to meet livestock requirements.

If you have 50 cows, each requiring 77 MJ ME/day, their total daily energy demand is:

  • 50 x 77 MJ ME/day = 3,850 MJ ME/day

If grazing deferred grass provides 2,000 MJ ME/day (e.g. 2 hectares grazed daily at 10 MJ ME/kg DM), you need to provide an additional 1,850 MJ ME/day from hay bales:

  • 1,850 MJME/day divided by 3,060 MJ ME/bale = 0.6 bales/day

Further information and next steps

Back to: Best-practice guide to outwintering

Outwintering livestock: Planning and preparation

Outwintering livestock: Feeding hay or silage

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