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Home » hoof trimming

Articles Tagged with ''hoof trimming''

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Hoof care academy focuses on the basics for improved standard practices

A newly developed hoof care course uses education and hands-on training to improve animal welfare on farms.
October 1, 2024
Jenn Coyne

The team of Dr. Jen Walker, Dr. Gerard Cramer and Jamie Sullivan are using their expertise and experience to educate, train and promote the principles of hoof care, and proper functional and therapeutic trimming techniques for improved animal welfare on farms through the Kinder Hoof Care Academy Trimmer Training.


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Management of lame cows to improve animal welfare

As caretakers of dairy cattle, there’s a moral and ethical responsibility to reduce the suffering of lame cows. What can we do to manage lameness more effectively and improve animal welfare?
August 27, 2024
Jan K. Shearer

The welfare of a lame cow is affected in at least three ways: 1) it interferes with natural behaviors such as walking, lying down and interacting with herdmates; 2) it impairs normal function by reducing milk production and reproductive efficiency; and 3) the pain impacts the cow’s affective states of physical and mental well-being. What can we do to manage lameness more effectively and improve the welfare of cows that develop lameness?



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Lameness prevention starts with you

Proper procedures to prevent lameness on the farm will help improve hoof health, cow efficiency and herd productivity.
July 25, 2024
Octavio Mendivil

I work with farms across the country troubleshooting for potential contributors to lameness prevalence in their herd. Cattle lameness is a challenge that every farm will one day experience. It is better to prevent it through procedures such as scheduled maintenance, hoof trimming and overall herd management practices.


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Efficient handling space to reduce lameness in robotic milking facilities

Efficient handling space in robotic milking facilities is essential to reduce lameness and improve overall herd health and productivity. Focus on proper design, regular maintenance and the integration of advanced technologies.
July 15, 2024
Jouni Pitkaranta and Antti Puuri

In robotic milking systems, where cows need to move frequently to and from milking robots, lameness can severely disrupt operations. Here are ways to prevent and address lameness in automated milking facilities.


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The correlation between hoof trimming and milk production, behavior

Combining farm data can help unravel the effect of trimming on milk production and behavior in dairy cows.
June 21, 2024
Karl Burgi and Miel Hostens

Producers express concerns that restraining cows during hoof trimming might induce both short- and long-term effects on production and behavior.


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On-farm training to treat lame cows: Identifying lameness on the modern dairy farm

Paying close attention to cows’ behavioral patterns and keeping track of cows that had mastitis are ways to find cows in the early stages of lameness.
June 4, 2024
Lee Erickson

All lactating cows should be locomotion scored on a weekly basis. This is a great start in identifying cows that could benefit from a trip through the trimming chute. In addition to locomotion scoring, what other techniques can we implement on a daily basis that could help us catch the cows with an early onset of lameness? 


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Control digital dermatitis with a cow-sensitive approach

Improved hygiene on the dairy through proper footbath protocols is a key way producers can manage the presence of digital dermatitis in their herds.
April 8, 2024
Jenn Coyne

Severely lame cows are easily distinguishable in the herd, even to the untrained eye. The key is to work with the farm team in identifying and addressing lameness early. This may be before the lesion is visible until you pick the foot up in the hoof-trimming chute.


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Breaking the 'become lame and stay lame' mentality

Too often, cows become lame, stay lame and leave the herd. In understanding the seven key factors that reduce chronic lameness, farms can break the “become lame, stay lame” cycle.
July 21, 2023
Karl Burgi

The latest data shows between 2% and 54% of dairy cows worldwide can be lame in a given year.


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Take a team approach to improve lameness management

Multiple farm advisers are often independently involved in lameness management. A recent study revealed the benefits of bringing advisers together to provide early and effective lameness treatments and developing prevention strategies.
June 14, 2023
Erin Wynands

Due to the significant negative impact on cow welfare and the complexity of the issue, multiple farm advisers are often involved in lameness management.


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How WCROC’s farm combatted lameness in a grazing herd

Lameness is one of the greatest costs to dairy cattle, yet many grazing herds do not incorporate a routine hoof trimming schedule into herd management. One farm has developed a schedule that does not interrupt the grazing schedule and makes hoof health a priority.
June 1, 2023
William (Willie) Coyne and Brad Heins

Lameness is one of the costliest disorders of dairy cattle, even in a grazing dairy herd. Yet, many grazing dairy cattle are not part of a routine hoof trimming schedule.


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