If you’ve ever turned a fresh group of bawling weanlings onto winter pasture… only to watch your beautiful ryegrass or small grains disappear faster than a feed truck at dawn, you’re not alone.
Winter annuals are some of the most valuable forages we have in West Texas. They grow when nothing else does, they support high gains, and they take pressure off hay. But they’re also some of the easiest for calves to overgraze—especially during and right after weaning.
Here’s the thing most folks don’t realize:
Your weaning program—how you transition calves, how you feed them, how you manage stress—can make or break your winter pasture for the rest of the season.
So today, we’re going to break down:
- How to avoid overgrazing winter annuals with freshly weaned calves
- What realistic gains look like on wheat, small grains, and ryegrass
- When and how to supplement calves so your pasture doesn’t get hammered
We’ll keep it practical. No fluff. Just things you can use this week.
Why Winter Forage Gets Hammered During Weaning Season
Let’s back up to the basics.
A freshly weaned calf is:
- stressed
- burning more calories
- pacing
- bawling
- not fully adapted to a new feed
- not fully settled socially
- trying to figure out the new routine
And stressed calves graze hard. They take more bites per minute, trample more forage, and spend more time roaming instead of grazing efficiently.
Now layer that on top of a winter pasture that grows slowly during cold snaps?
That’s how a 60-day pasture plan gets wrecked in 10 days.
Winter annuals like wheat, oats, triticale, and ryegrass can keep up with grazing pressure once calves are settled—but they rarely keep up with early-weaning behavior.
This is where your weaning program either saves the season… or sinks it.
Winter Annuals Are High-Value—Don’t Let Weaning Destroy Them
Winter pasture isn’t just forage. It’s a vital nutrition program that can support your herd’s health and productivity, fostering appreciation for careful management.
Here’s what it offers:
- Protein levels around 18–24%
- Energy levels similar to a grower ration
- Digestibility often above 70%
- Natural vitamins and trace minerals
You’re basically providing calves with a premium feedlot ration… grown by the acre instead of bought by the bag.
But—and this is the big picture most producers miss—
Winter pasture only pays off when you manage grazing pressure.
Once small grains or ryegrass are grazed below about 3–4 inches, regrowth slows way down. The plant has to dip into its reserves rather than use sunlight. And when a pasture goes backward in December or January, it usually never catches up.
That’s why your weaning plan must be built around protecting forage height, root reserves, and plant energy.
Expected Gains on Winter Annuals (Realistic Numbers)
Let’s set some expectations before we talk strategy.
When winter annuals are managed correctly, calves can gain:
- 1.8–2.5 lbs/day on wheat pasture
- 2.0–2.7 lbs/day on oats or triticale
- 2.5–3.0 lbs/day on ryegrass
Those are big, profitable gains—especially in a year when every pound counts.
But here’s the catch:
Those gains only happen on ungrazed or lightly grazed forage with plenty of leaf area.
Once calves overgraze early:
- gains fall to 1.2–1.6 lbs/day
- calves pace instead of grazing
- Forage stops regrowing
- mud increases
- nutrient density crashes
So it’s not about “putting calves on winter pasture.”
It’s about protecting the winter pasture so it can do its job.
Avoiding Overgrazing: The 3 Biggest Mistakes Producers Make
Mistake #1: Turning calves onto winter pasture too early
This can undermine your efforts and cause frustration; timing is key to success. This is the #1 reason winter pastures fail.
Calves get placed on small grains before the plants hit:
- 6 inches tall for wheat
- 8–10 inches for ryegrass
Roots aren’t deep enough. Reserves aren’t built. And the moment calves graze too low, the pasture loses its engine.
A good rule of thumb:
If you can see more dirt than leaves, you’re already behind.
Mistake #2: Using winter pasture as both feed and weaning pen
This is where overgrazing goes into overdrive.
Weaning requires:
- walking
- pacing
- grouping
- social sorting
- bawling
- stress-related energy burn
All of these behaviors destroy forage. Calves walk much more than usual, compacting soil and tearing up plant crowns.
Better options:
- Drylot the first 5–7 days
- Use a sacrifice area
- Use a corral near the house
- Use a weaning paddock adjacent to the winter pasture
Let the calves settle before they hit the premium forage.
Mistake #3: Not supplementing early enough
This is the most misunderstood winter forage management principle:
Supplementation protects pasture—not the other way around.
When calves are underfed, they eat more forage.
or when calves are stressed, they trample forage.
When forage gets hammered, calves stop gaining.
It’s a cycle.
We’ll talk supplementation shortly, but remember:
Supplementing early = more pounds + healthier forage
How to Keep Calves from Overgrazing Winter Pasture
Here are the practical, real-world approaches that actually work.
1. Start Weaning OFF pasture, not on it
Ideally, you want calves:
- drylotted
- fenceline-weaned
- or placed in a sacrifice area
For 5–10 days before ever touching the winter pasture.
This calms behavior, stabilizes intake, and gets calves adapted to feed.
Benefits:
- Calves hit the pasture, eating normally
- grazing becomes efficient instead of frantic
- trampling drops by 40–60%
- Forage height stays consistent
2. Rotate pasture in “strips” or “blocks.”
Even if you’re not set up for full rotational grazing, you can use:
- polywire
- temp panels
- electric tape
- step-in posts
To give calves smaller areas at a time.
This:
- reduces overgrazing
- improves uniform grazing
- keeps calves from hammering the same spot daily
The rotation doesn’t need to be perfect.
It just needs to be intentional.
3. Set your stocking rate based on height—not head count
With winter annuals, the stocking rate is NOT fixed.
It changes with forage height.
A good rule:
Never graze below 3–4 inches in December or January.
If winter slows growth, pull calves off or reduce numbers.
If forage jumps ahead after rain, add calves or increase graze time.
Supplementation: When and How to Save Your Winter Forage
This is where most producers either overspend or underspend—supplementing calves on winter forage is a balancing act that can make or break your gains and your pasture. Put out too much feed, and you’re burning money without actually improving performance. Don’t feed enough, and suddenly those calves are grazing harder than your ryegrass or small grains can recover from. The trick is finding that sweet spot where the supplement supports the forage rather than replacing it, helping you stretch your acres and maximize weight gain at the same time. Understanding how and when to use it is one of the simplest ways to protect your winter pasture and keep your weaning program on track.
When should you supplement?
Simple answer:
When forage height is shrinking—or when calves aren’t gaining at least 1.8 lbs/day.
Supplement early, not late.
How much should you feed?
Great starting points for weaned calves on winter pasture:
2–3 lbs/day of a 14–20% weaning pellet
OR
2 lbs/day cottonseed cake
OR
3 lbs/day is a grower ration
This small bit of supplement:
- stabilizes energy
- reduces grazing pressure
- supports rumen function
- prevents panic grazing
- improves uniform gains
- allows pasture recovery
Think of supplementation as a tool—not a cost.
What about feeding hay?
Good-quality grass hay is a powerful pressure-relief valve.
Feed hay when:
- Forage is short
- The weather is cold
- Calves are pacing
- Pastures are muddy
Even 3–5 lbs/day of hay can dramatically reduce trampling and overgrazing.

How Winter Weather Affects Calf Gains (and Pasture Pressure)
Cold snaps increase calf energy needs by:
- 10–20% during a mild cold
- 20–30% during wind chill
- 30–40% during freezing rain
If they don’t get those extra calories:
- They graze harder
- forage height drops
- weight gains slow
- sickness risk rises
This is why you must bump supplementation during weather swings.
Calves won’t “take it easy” on forage when they’re cold—they’ll hammer it harder.
Watch for These Signs Your Winter Pasture Is Getting Overgrazed
Calves will ALWAYS tell you what’s happening.
You just have to watch for:
- long grazing periods (>8 hours/day)
- forage height under 3–4 inches
- muddy, pugged areas
- bare ground showing
- calves bawling more
- calves digging for leftover forage
- manure turning dry and small
- weight gain flattening out
The earlier you catch these signs, the easier it is to fix.
How to Decide When to Pull Calves Off Pasture
Here are hard, simple benchmarks:
Pull calves if:
- Forage drops below 3 inches
- growth stalls for 10+ days
- Calves start pacing or grouping excessively
- mud increases
- You can see bare ground where green should be
Add supplement if:
- Forage is dropping fast
- The weather is turning cold
- Calves are eating aggressively
- gains drop below 2 lbs/day
These rules prevent long-term pasture damage.
A Quick Note on Weaning Stress and Pasture Damage
Calves under stress walk more, graze more, and trample more.
One way to reduce this (and protect your forage) is to use stress-reducing practices like fenceline weaning, calm handling, and proper bunk training.
In fact, I explain how to keep calves eating better in The Most Stress-Free Weaning: Your Actually Simple Fall Guide
, which ties directly into protecting your winter pasture over the next 60–90 days.
One Solid Resource Worth Checking Out
For more detailed grazing science on small grains, the Oklahoma State University Small Grains Grazing Management Guide does an excellent job explaining how forage height impacts calf gains and regrowth (outbound link fulfilled here).
Final Thoughts: Your Weaning Program Sets the Tone for Winter Grazing
Here’s the honest truth:
Your weaning plan matters more than your grazing plan.
Because if your calves hit winter pasture stressed, hungry, and unsettled, they’ll burn it down before it ever gets a chance to shine.
But if you:
- Settle calves BEFORE turning them out
- Protect early pasture height
- supplement strategically
- rotate access
- Feed hay when needed
…your winter forage will last longer, support higher gains, and reduce your overall feed bill.
Winter annuals are powerful—but only when you manage them like the premium feed source they are.
You’ve got this.
And come March, your calves (and your pastures) will show it.
I was suggested this blog by my cousin. I’m no longer sure whether this
post is written by him as nobody else recognise
such designated about my difficulty. You’re wonderful!
Thanks!