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Livestock
Dairy Farming
Robotic milking
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<blockquote data-quote="WestNI" data-source="post: 7217527" data-attributes="member: 153011"><p>No we did not test and was not aware you could test, but it happened straight after we changed silage, and absolutely nothing else changed, the robots got the blame first but we had them checked over and they where 100% so it could be nothing else, we are running a milking parlour too and there were no issues in that shed, the only difference was they where not getting the same silage. The E.coli stopped as soon as the binder went in. It was like a switch was flicked. So it kind of was a guess but a calculated guess.</p><p></p><p>Binders sure are expensive but we lost a few very good cows to the E.coli and saving just one of them would have paid for a lot of binder.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WestNI, post: 7217527, member: 153011"] No we did not test and was not aware you could test, but it happened straight after we changed silage, and absolutely nothing else changed, the robots got the blame first but we had them checked over and they where 100% so it could be nothing else, we are running a milking parlour too and there were no issues in that shed, the only difference was they where not getting the same silage. The E.coli stopped as soon as the binder went in. It was like a switch was flicked. So it kind of was a guess but a calculated guess. Binders sure are expensive but we lost a few very good cows to the E.coli and saving just one of them would have paid for a lot of binder. [/QUOTE]
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