Watch our previous webinar: Setting the cow up for success – Post-calving performance – Energy
Watch the webinar recording here
Webinar summary: Post-calving performance – Energy
This webinar looks at how farmers can support cows after calving through a focus on appetite, rumen stability, liver health, and energy balance. It highlights how to combine visual assessments, wearable data, and blood tests to get a full picture of recovery, and covers how feed quality, mineral balance, and practical nutritional strategies help cows cycle, milk, and regain condition efficiently.
In this webinar:
Three ways to monitor recovery
- Visual checks – rumen fill, body condition, cow behaviour, and manure consistency give quick insights into appetite and digestion.
- Wearable data – rumination and eating minutes show how smoothly cows recover post-calving. Smooth, quick rebounds signal good transition feeding; erratic or slow recovery often points to energy or liver issues.
- Blood indicators – calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, NEFA, BHBA, GPX, and other markers reveal mineral balance, fat mobilisation, liver health, and immune resilience.
Appetite phases
- Freshly calved cows (first few days) – appetite is influenced by condition gain/loss during the dry period, transition diet quality, and mineral balance.
- Lactating cows – appetite depends more on rumen stability, feed quality, and liver function.
Cow behaviour and manure as warning signs
- Idle or “sad-looking” cows, dull eyes, or rough coats suggest energy or mineral imbalance.
- Loose, bubbly, or watery manure with undigested fibre points to rumen instability or hindgut fermentation, meaning feed energy is being lost.
Wearables for early warning
- Good recovery shows as only a small dip in rumination and appetite that rebounds within days.
- Poor recovery appears as erratic or delayed rebounds, often caused by over-conditioned cows, poor transition diets, or inconsistent feeding.
Blood results and what they reveal
- Mineral imbalances (especially too much magnesium lowering calcium and phosphorus) can lead to downer cows.
- NEFA and BHBA together show whether fat mobilisation is being handled well by the liver.
- Low GPX alongside high ketones signals immune stress and higher risk of metritis or endometritis.
Pasture and seasonal feed challenges
- Late winter grass: low dry matter, lower energy, faster passage through the rumen, and higher levels of unsaturated fatty acids that stress microbes.
- Early spring grass: high protein and sugar, but still low dry matter and minerals like calcium and phosphorus. Supplementation and diet balancing are essential.
Feeding the rumen to feed the cow
- Soluble sugars spark microbial activity, starch maintains energy supply, and fibre provides longer-lasting fuel. Balancing these fractions supports stable rumen pH and feed conversion efficiency.
Nutritional levers for recovery
- Rumen buffers and live yeast to stabilise digestion.
- Good quality silage to drive appetite post-calving.
- Strategic use of sugar (molasses, lactose, by-products) to correct subclinical ketosis.
- Starch sources (wheat, maize, barley) to support milk protein and reduce high milk urea.
- Palm kernel and specific fatty acids (C16, C18:1) to aid condition and reproduction, while avoiding imbalance.
For more details, watch the webinar or download the slide deck.