Healthy Holstein dairy cows feed at a
farm in central
Washington in this December, 24, 2003
file photo.
|
Many Kenyans have ventured into dairy farming with high hopes of becoming rich, but very few live to realise this dream.
While
it is true you can mint millions selling milk produced by your dairy
cows; farmers fail to attain this for lack of good planning at the
foundation level. At the very core of any good dairy farming, breed
selection and subsequent animal husbandry are of paramount importance.
Milk
production is a factor of the genetic make-up and the environment,
where environment includes housing, feed and health management.
Dairy
cows are kept for milk production. Any farmer engaged in dairy
production must have lots of milk from his current herd, whose sales
must offset the amount spent on its production — where this isn’t the
case then, we can’t talk of commercial dairy production.
Indigenous
breeds have never been good at milk production since they are
multi-purpose — kept for drought resistance, milk and meat production.
Some counties like Garissa and Marsabit satisfy their markets with the
milk from indigenous animals due to their large stocks.
However, the problem of in-breeding perpetuated by free-range grazing is taking its toll on the productivity of Zebu cows.
PURE-BREEDS
There
are a number of exotic dairy animals — most farmers have herds of
Holstein-Friesian, Jersey, Ayrshire and Guernsey. These are called
pure-breeds. Each of these have distinct traits, like milk production,
milk butter-fat content, disease resistance, temperament, and heat
tolerance, among others.
Exotic dairy animals were
brought into Africa by Europeans and are either raised as pure-breeds or
crossed with the indigenous breeds. Similarly, Zebu cattle have been
introduced into America and crossed with the European breeds to yield
crosses that now litter North America and tropical South America.
These
animals have over time been breed either amongst themselves or with
indigenous cattle in Africa; either intentionally by breeders keen to
develop a certain trait over time, or it just happens within farms. The
result has been cross-breeds which have a combination of traits picked
from their ancestral lineage.
The aim of crossing is
to attain a novel breed with a combination of traits that suit a given
climatic region, the level of maintenance/management or the whims of the
farmer or breeder. When buying such crossed animals, it is crucial that
the farmer reads through the breeding records versus the milk
production.
Cross-breed animals have the advantage of
adaptability to local weather conditions and resistance to endemic
diseases. For example, a cross between Sahiwal and Freshian produces a
breed that can withstand heat stress, disease and at the same time
produce relatively high amounts of milk in dry areas.
COMMERCIAL OR SUBSISTENCE?
Whether
to buy a cross or a pure breed is subject to a number of factors; but
whose outcome set apart commercial from subsistence dairy production. A
farmer may prefer to keep Friesians due to their high milk production
while forgetting that this comes at a cost both in feeds and health
management, without which the inherent genetic trait will not be
exhibited.
Others will rush into buying the Jersey for
its high milk butter-fat content only to discover much later that our
Kenyan markets pay for quantity and not the butter-fat.
Generally,
the following will pass for a good dairy animal — it should have alert
eyes, a lean neck and progressively widen towards the hindquarters with
bony prominence giving a wedge shape when viewed from the sides or top.
This
is important because it shows how much food the animal can consume,
which is a major determinant of how much milk it can produce. The bony
prominence is a visible sign of a milk producing animal’s genetic trait.
The opposite will be for a beef animal as it will be blocky, without
any bony prominence.
OF UDDER IMPORTANCE
The
udder is the most crucial part that a lot of attention must be paid
too. A good dairy animal will have an udder that is firmly anchored onto
the abdomen with well demarcated four quarters that have sizeable teats
and a visible network of blood vessels.
A pendulous
udder will predispose the animal to mastitis, which should be kept at
bay during the lactation period of any dairy animal for maximal
production.
A broad strong muzzle is a good anatomical
feature as it implies good food apprehension and chewing ability which
is crucial to milk production as lots of grass must be eaten by the cow
to produce milk.
Closely tied to this is the need for
well sprung ribs with inter-rib distance able to accommodate two or
three finger; this implies enough room for the rumen, which is a
fermentation fault for microbial digestion of fibrous grass.
A
visit to your local veterinary doctor will inform you on breed
characteristics and milk producing abilities relative to your resource
abilities and geographic locality.
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