From Stress to Success: Practical Ways to Improve Feedlot Performance

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Stress in cattle is like feed in a bunk—add too much and it spills over. While weather and other factors are out of our hands, many stressors are controllable. Managing them gives cattle the capacity to handle the rest.

Here are 10 practical ways to improve feedlot performance:

1. Set Realistic Expectations

High-risk cattle will always have some losses. Records help you know what’s realistic for your yard and make breakeven calculations clear before buying.

2. Source Cattle Wisely

Low-risk cattle come from a single source, are vaccinated, and have short travel. High-risk cattle—commingled, unvaccinated, or long-haul—start with their “bunk already full.” They can succeed, but only with top management and adjusted expectations.

3. Provide Adequate Bunk Space

New arrivals need 18 inches of space per head, 12 inches minimum. Less space means more fighting, less eating, and lower gains. Sometimes fewer head per pen is more profitable.

4. Don’t Overcrowd Pens

Target 40 sq. ft. per head indoors. Crowding cattle in tight pens stacks stress quickly, especially when bunk space is also limited.

5. Keep Nutrition Consistent

Feed at the same time each day, keep rations uniform, and monitor bunks daily. Consistency in feeding prevents intake crashes and performance dips.

6. Prioritize Clean, Dry Cattle

Mud and manure tags rob energy from gain. Good bedding keeps cattle comfortable and productive.

7. Manage Water Access

Water drives feed intake. Provide at least 1 inch of linear space per head, and consider portable tanks in hot months to prevent shortages.

8. Maintain Airflow

Fresh air supports healthy lungs and reduces respiratory issues. Don’t lock barns up tight—ventilation is as important as any vaccine program.

9. Use Vaccines Strategically

Vaccines matter, but timing and overall management matter more. Poor timing adds stress. Work with your vet on protocols suited to your cattle and system.

10. Mind the Money

Even great management can’t fix cattle bought too high. Set breakevens, track costs, and know when to walk away.

From Stress to Success

Feedlot performance isn’t about one factor—it’s about managing stressors before they spill over. By focusing on the basics—space, water, nutrition, husbandry, and realistic goals—producers can keep cattle healthier, improve performance, and set themselves up for long-term success.

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