Monday, December 26, 2011

How Much Milk?

This is a question I get asked A LOT!  And, one that requires a lot of math to answer.  First of all, dairy farmers are paid based on pounds, or even more specifically hundred weights (cwt.) of milk, not gallons, like most of you are used to buying it.
First of all, it takes approximately 8 pounds of milk to make a gallon of whole milk.  (we'll leave it simple for now, and not worry about trying to convert it to skim)

Our milk gets picked up every day, and the milk truck driver writes the weight based on the measurement of the liquid in the tank.  Our cows will vary what they milk from day to day, depending on the weather and a variety of other factors, but overall stay pretty consistent from day to day until we get major weather shifts (like summer heat).

For instance, today our cows milked 6150 pounds, and we are milking 88 cows, so each of our cows is milking
6150/88 = 72.6 pounds per cow. 
72.6 / 8 = 9.075 gallons per cow per day

Remember, that each cow gets milked twice each day, so that means they each give ~36 pounds of milk or 4 1/2 gallons every morning & every night.

Brent can tell you how many Dairy Queen Blizzards that is a day.
If our cows would maintain that milk production year round, they would produce (73*365) 26,645 pounds  (3,330 gallons) in a year, and the entire herd, based on having 90 cows in the herd (we are a little low on cows right now) is (73*365*90) 2,398,050 pounds of milk (or 299,756 gallons) produced from our farm each year.

Now, we don't produce that much milk right now for a couple of reasons.  One, our cows are doing really well right now.  It's cool temperatures, and they are enjoying their new barn.  We also have a lot of cows that are fresh (or just calved) this fall, and they tend to give more milk for the first 3-4 months after calving.  The other reason is that cows don't milk 365 days a year, if everything works correctly.  A cow should have a calf about every year.  Before she has her next calf, we stop milking her for about 2 months.  That gives the cow a chance to "reset" or "reboot", and put all of her energy needs towards her pregnancy.  We also move them to a different pen (appropriately named "Maternity") that we bed with straw, so that the calf can be born into a dry place, without all the other cows around to potentially harm them.  

Besides knowing the bulk tank weight (the weight the milk truck driver writes down), we also know how much each individual cow is milking.  We have a milk tester come out to our farm monthly.  Our tester, Jenny, brings milk meters that are attached to the milking machines, and give us a reading of what each cow is milking. 

You can see the different jars filling up at different rates based on how much those cows are milking.

Cow #9025 is milking ~30 pounds this milking (60 pounds per day or 7 1/2 gallons per day)

She also takes samples of milk from each cow to test for fat and protein.  This all gets put into a computer program that Brent accesses on his labtop, and allows us to keep records on all of the cows, determining what things we need to watch for, or improve upon.

That's enough math for a Sunday night I think! 

2 comments:

  1. Ames Mrs. Mimlitz's class
    Nolan
    Hi, I would just like to know how many cows do you have? And what are some of their names?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. We currently have 99 cows, and 94 heifers of varying ranges.
      Check out how we name them here:
      http://mycowsandpigs.blogspot.com/2011/01/million-dollar-reward.html

      http://mycowsandpigs.blogspot.com/2011/06/our-kays.html

      Delete

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