If you’ve been in the cattle business for more than a couple of winters, you already know one thing for sure — running out of feed before February flat-out hurts. It doesn’t just affect your cows; it also impacts your checkbook, stress level, and ability to finish the season strong. Not having a realistic winter feed plan can lead to unexpected expenses, compromised cow health, and increased stress, which can all significantly impact your overall ranching operation.
This time of year — when the pastures are browning out, the mornings start with frost, and the cows are shifting from grazing to full-on hay mode — is when it pays to take a hard look at your winter feed plan. Because let’s be honest: hoping you’ve “got enough hay to make it” usually ends with an empty stack and a surprise feed bill in January.
That’s why now’s the time to get honest about your numbers. How much hay do you actually have on hand? How much do your cows need to maintain body condition through calving? Do you have a supplement program in place that makes sense for your forage quality, or are you throwing out cubes and tubs hoping it balances out?
A solid winter feed plan doesn’t have to be complicated or expensive — it just has to be realistic. With a bit of math and some honest evaluation, you can stretch your hay farther, keep your cows in better shape, and avoid those last-minute feed runs that eat into your profit.
So, let’s break it down step by step: how to evaluate your hay inventory, fine-tune your supplement strategy, and build a winter feed budget that actually lasts through February — without any guesswork.
If there’s one thing every rancher in West Texas can agree on, it’s this: winter feeding has a way of sneaking up fast. One minute you’re swatting flies and watching calves kick up their heels in the late-summer heat, and the next you’re staring down the first cold fronts, wondering if you’ve got enough hay stacked to make it through. When the weather flips, there’s no time to play catch-up—your cattle depend on you having a plan in place.