Successful Creep Feeding Management
Successful Creep Feeding Management
by Dan Herold
Beef Nutrition and Technical Services Manager
Hubbard Feeds
Cow-calf producers often simply view creep feeding as a way to increase calf weaning weights beyond what can be produced with mother’s milk and available forage. However, the benefits of creep feeding can reach well beyond weaning weight.
Preweaning
• Additional protein, vitamins and trace minerals enhance immunity and performance.
• Higher energy intake at an early age can increase marbling and carcass quality grade.
• In early-weaning programs, young calves are prepared to start on feed more quickly.
• When fenceline weaning, feeders serve as a nutrition base station to nourish calves.
• Coccidiosis control can be provided in creep feed to promote health and weight gain.
Postweaning
• More immediate transition to bunk feeding with less weaning shrink.
• Early feed intake reduces weaning stress and improves health and weight gain.
• Better nutrient status supports the immune system and vaccine response.
• Heavier calf-feds can be first to market in spring and summer, saving feed and yardage costs.
Setting the stage for success
A successful creep feeding program requires an understanding of factors affecting feed intake. Feed quality and quantity determine energy intake of young calves and are based on the nutritional theory that calves will select the most nutritious and easily digestible diet available. The ration choice for nursing calves follows this order of preference: milk; fresh, young grass; creep feed or mid-bloom grass; mature grass.
When milk production and grass quality decline late in the season, intake will shift from forage to creep feed. Moderate-energy creep is now the most nutritious option to fill the calves’ hunger gap and fuel their increasing energy needs for growth. Creep feeding late in the season requires more attention and management than was required in early- to mid-summer. Calves’ appetites are growing at a time when their base ration of milk and grass are quickly disappearing.
A rapid increase in creep feed intake can catch cow-calf producers by surprise. In a typical 100-day feeding program, creep feed consumption averages 4.5 pounds (lb.) per day. This is based on a range beginning at 0.5 lb. per day in early July and ending at 8-12 lbs. in late October. It may require more than a month for the feeder to empty early in the summer and just days to empty it later in the fall. Consider 50 calves eating 10 lb. of creep feed per day will consume one ton of feed in just four days. A sudden increase in intake is a good indication the pasture is nearly spent and it is time to wean calves.
Creep is intended to supplement milk and grass, rather than to serve as a complete feed. It is natural for hungry calves to increase creep consumption when faced with declining milk and forage supplies. However, the sudden increase in energy intake can trigger an undesirable response from rumen bacteria.
Rumen “bugs” that are accustomed to slowly fermented grass will break down creep feed at a faster rate. For calves, the shift from slowly digested forage fiber to an abundance of readily available energy in the rumen usually yields the same outcome: enhanced fermentation rate, increased ruminal acid and gas production and potential digestive upset.
This sequence of events is why it is strongly recommended to wean at the appropriate time and never run out of creep feed. This rule applies especially at the end of the grazing season, when intakes are highest. The risk of overeating is at its peak when the feeder is refilled, and hungry calves return to make up for lost meals.
As calves become more dependent on creep to meet the demands for maintenance and growth, more attention needs to be given to maintaining feeders.
Gates should be adjusted to encourage calves to work a little harder to obtain creep. Inserting the handles of a standard set of pliers between the feed gate and bottom of the feeder can serve to gauge the correct distance.
Keeping the opening to just a few inches will keep feed flowing while reducing accumulation of fines and spoiled feed. Excess feed accumulating in the trough absorbs saliva as calves nuzzle and sort feed to locate larger particles. The result is soft pellets that break down into fines, which can build up quickly. This accumulation encourages more sorting, as calves don’t like fines, and the cycle continues until the feeder is cleaned and fresh feed is available.
Feeder troughs should be checked and cleaned out routinely and at greater frequency as the season progresses.
As previously noted, creep feed can provide several benefits by supporting weaning weight, calf health, ease of weaning and, ultimately, quality and value of the finished product. However, the objective of the program should be to achieve a balanced intake, with creep feed serving to supplement milk and grass rather than replace it.
When properly used, creep can take pressure off both the cow and forage resource preweaning and help calves transition through postweaning stress. When creep feed intake rapidly ramps up late-season, it is a clear signal it is time to wean. Digestive upsets are the result of failing to recognize this transition. Use proper management to prevent sudden swings in energy consumption.
Using creep feed as a strategy to extend the grazing season past the point of optimum intake is an unnecessary risk to calf health and producer profit. Creep feeding coupled with good management will yield the most benefits both pre- and postweaning.