OH Breeder
Well-known member
LindseyMaines-
I do not know when you are showing or your county fair is but if you want to have hair you will need to rinse. When I was young and my first few years of showing I had to borrow a chute til I had one built. If you can halter your guy you can tie him to the back of a truck to rinse him. You need to run the hose over him rinse him an til his brisket is cool. You do not have to wash him every day with soap cause as you said it will dry his skin out. Feed can create heat and cause your hair to fall out. I had two box fans that I kept on my calf and they moved air just fine an til I could afford newer bigger fans. Is your barn an old bank barn and he's in the bottom? I know you had pictures before of your barn and it has an old stone foundation. Is he on straw and do you have a dirt floor in the barn? If you want to keep him clean you should probably pick his stall just like you would a horse once a day. If you don't do it once a day then once a week. If you keep the manure out he won't get dirty and his hair will stay cleaner. His genetics also may be why his hair is short and coarse. if he had great hair this winter just like other cattle as they mature, it can get coarser with age and shorter. Remember how short your diary feeders were. Holsteins are not known to have alot of hair. It is short and coarse. Cattle do sweat. I am not sure why anyone wouldn't' think so. But even just moving the air around will help with that. If he is gaining well there are supplements and feed rations that are may not quiet as hot to help with core heat. There are several threads on daily hair care. Once he gets use to it you are in Michigan and he will appreciate it when the summer months roll around. In our part of country we have some temperature extremes, especially in the summer.
So
work on rinsing
Brush brush brush- stimulates natural oils as well as stimulates hair growth
keep his pen clean
get a box fan or two if you can't afford the big fans- you can find them at Walmart for 15.00
Do you have a feed consultant you could work with? Barley in the end can add some nice hard cover and does not create as much heat.
I do not know when you are showing or your county fair is but if you want to have hair you will need to rinse. When I was young and my first few years of showing I had to borrow a chute til I had one built. If you can halter your guy you can tie him to the back of a truck to rinse him. You need to run the hose over him rinse him an til his brisket is cool. You do not have to wash him every day with soap cause as you said it will dry his skin out. Feed can create heat and cause your hair to fall out. I had two box fans that I kept on my calf and they moved air just fine an til I could afford newer bigger fans. Is your barn an old bank barn and he's in the bottom? I know you had pictures before of your barn and it has an old stone foundation. Is he on straw and do you have a dirt floor in the barn? If you want to keep him clean you should probably pick his stall just like you would a horse once a day. If you don't do it once a day then once a week. If you keep the manure out he won't get dirty and his hair will stay cleaner. His genetics also may be why his hair is short and coarse. if he had great hair this winter just like other cattle as they mature, it can get coarser with age and shorter. Remember how short your diary feeders were. Holsteins are not known to have alot of hair. It is short and coarse. Cattle do sweat. I am not sure why anyone wouldn't' think so. But even just moving the air around will help with that. If he is gaining well there are supplements and feed rations that are may not quiet as hot to help with core heat. There are several threads on daily hair care. Once he gets use to it you are in Michigan and he will appreciate it when the summer months roll around. In our part of country we have some temperature extremes, especially in the summer.
So
work on rinsing
Brush brush brush- stimulates natural oils as well as stimulates hair growth
keep his pen clean
get a box fan or two if you can't afford the big fans- you can find them at Walmart for 15.00
Do you have a feed consultant you could work with? Barley in the end can add some nice hard cover and does not create as much heat.