Episode notes
The Henschel family near Manawa, Wisconsin milked through 5-to-15-foot drifts during the March 14–16, 2026 blizzard — hit every milking, kept feed in front of cows — and still had to open the valve and dump nearly a full day's milk because the truck couldn't reach them. The federal safety net paid exactly $0 on that milk. In this episode, we break down why every disaster program USDA offers covers dead cows, extra feed, and margin shortfalls, but not a single one covers milk dumped in 2026. We run the barn math on what a 72-hour transport shutdown actually costs at 200, 500, and 1,000 cows — and lay out what you can do about it before the next storm hits.
Key Takeaways:
- Why LIP, ELAP, DMC, and NAP all failed to cover the Henschels' actual milk loss — and the one program that would have (the Milk Loss Program) clo ...
Keywords
dairy risk managementWisconsin dairy farmingdairy risk management strategiesfarm safety netmilk loss programdumped milkdairy farm blizzardon-farm milk storage