Empowering the Farm Team to Act Early
On the cellphone or laptop dashboard each cow’s activity, rumination and feeding levels are visible so that each team member has the background data to understand the alerts.
“It is really easy to understand and follow – even team members who are not very digital find it easy – and for any young ones it’s just intuitive.” Chad says.
Farm staff are trained by Chad to then use a protocol to understand what is going on with the highlighted and drafted cow.
“They walk her to the crush, is she limping? Possible lameness? Check her breathing – is it a respiratory problem? Check the udder – possible mastitis brewing? Check the back end – metritis or other repro issue? If you are not sure, take the rectal temperature. If elevated, escalate to the manager for possible antibiotic input, if not, call it a digestive upset and treat with B12 vitamin shot, a Ketomax anti-inflammatory shot and a probiotic paste, all with no milk withholding issues, put her out in the sick cow mob and she can take it easy for a few days.”
Most of the time the intervention sorts the cow out, Chad says, and the early treatment usually prevents a couple more days of her developing whatever illness it was.
Better Outcomes Through Earlier Intervention
But by identifying she is off her food two-three days before a team member could notice she is hollowed out (or even a sharp stockperson could observe she is not herself), a very early intervention, pick-me-up treatment allows the cow to heal itself.
If the temperature is up, the developing infection will be treated with the antibiotic treatment relevant to her stage of lactation under advice from the vet, Chad says.
“The system is watching every cow, every day, all of the time – which is impossible to see in a large herd even for a really top stockperson.”
“The system has not necessarily decreased our antibiotic use, but it has done a lot for our vet callouts and cow losses, and we are minimising time out of the main milking mob.” Chad says the vet spend is down, but the vet still comes for the odd cow with undiagnosed illness, and they still lose some – but “those ones are on the vet – not on me”, he laughed.