Notas del episodio
That swollen udder on your fresh heifer isn't "just how it is." It's a disease process — and in a market where replacement heifers cost $3,000–$4,000, it's bleeding money you can't afford to lose. Research published in the Journal of Dairy Science found udder edema in 86% of first-lactation heifers across commercial freestall herds. When you stack up milk loss, mastitis, slow-milkers, and early culls, the bill lands at $3,500–$16,000 per year on a 100-cow herd. This episode breaks down the economics, the biology, and the surprisingly affordable management fix that top herds are using to cut their edema rates in half.
Key Takeaways:
- Why udder edema is a disease — not a cosmetic issue — and why treating it as "normal" is costing you thousands annually
- The 2025–2026 heifer shortage reality: inventor ...
Palabras clave
dairy profitabilitytransition cow successudder edemafresh heifer managementmastitis controlheifer rearing costsU.S. dairy industry