Why Your Cattle Feeding Program Isn’t Working NowIf your cattle feeding program in May is the same as it was in February, you could be losing money without realizing it. Around this time in West Texas and the Southern Plains, many producers think green grass means nutrition is covered. But that’s often when performance drops and feed dollars start to go to waste.
In late winter, your supplement plan probably matched the conditions: dormant grass, low protein, and cows just holding their condition. When spring arrives, forage quality changes fast. There’s more moisture, higher protein, and cattle graze more, but that doesn’t always mean their nutrition is balanced or performance is at its best.
This is where things can be misleading. Everything looks good on the surface: green pastures, full cattle, and plenty of forage. But underneath, there can still be energy shortages, mineral gaps, and other issues that hurt weight gain, body condition, and reproduction. These problems don’t appear overnight—they build up slowly.
This is when successful cattle producers make a change. It’s not just about getting cows through the season anymore—it’s about helping them perform their best. That means your spring supplement plan should change as your pasture does.

The Core Problem: The Program Didn’t Fail—The Conditions Changed

Here’s where many people get caught: your winter feeding program didn’t fail, it just doesn’t fit the current conditions. What worked in February was designed for a different situation, and as spring arrives in West Texas, cattle nutrition changes faster than most feeding programs.
Think about what you were dealing with just a couple of months ago. Dormant forage, low protein, limited intake, and cows burning energy just to maintain body condition through cold weather. In that scenario, a higher protein supplement strategy made sense. You were filling gaps, supporting intake, and simply trying to hold things together until grass showed up.
But now the grass has come in, and everything has changed.
In May, your pasture is typically:
  • High in protein
  • High in moisture
  • Lower in effective fiber
  • Moving through the rumen faster
This is where things can seem backwards. Even with lots of protein, cattle might not get enough energy. Rumen microbes need energy to use protein, and without it, efficiency drops. Subtle problems like loose manure or poor gains can show up, even when the grass looks good.
At the same time, mineral intake often falls off. With lush forage, cattle don’t crave salt the same way they did during the winter, which means your mineral program may not be getting consumed as you expect.
On the surface, everything seems fine. But underneath, the nutritional environment has changed completely. If your supplement plan hasn’t kept up, your feeding program is already falling behind.

Why It Happens: Habit Is Expensive This Time of Year

Here’s the truth most people don’t want to admit: this usually isn’t a knowledge problem, it’s a timing problem. Most cattle producers don’t ignore the changes in spring nutrition on purpose—it just happens quickly. One day you’re feeding through winter, and suddenly everything is green, but your supplement plan is still set for February.
May is hectic: branding, pasture rotation, late calving, broken equipment, unpredictable weather. Feeding becomes a lower priority unless it’s visibly wrong. By then, you’ve already lost ground.
A few common patterns show up every year:
  • The “grass looks good” trap. Green pasture creates the illusion that cattle nutrition is handled, but forage quality and balance are distinct.
  • Sticking with what worked in winter. If your supplement plan kept cows healthy in February, it’s easy to think it still works. But spring forage changes faster than most feeding strategies.
  • Intake is quietly dropping off. Cattle don’t hit mineral feeders the same in May. Less salt craving, more grazing, and suddenly your mineral program isn’t being consumed as you think.
  • Time is working against you. May is busy, and fine-tuning a cattle feeding program doesn’t always make the top of the list.
  • Pulling back too much. Trying not to overfeed can sometimes mean you end up underfeeding the nutrients that matter most now, especially energy and minerals.
That’s when the costs start to appear. You might be feeding something cattle no longer need, or missing what they do need for spring pasture. Either way, your supplement plan isn’t working as well as it should.

Practical Management Strategies: Adjusting Without Guesswork

If your cattle nutrition program seems off track right now, you usually don’t need to start over. Instead, make a few smart changes based on what’s actually changed in your pasture. In May, forage quality shifts quickly in West Texas, so your supplement plan needs to keep up. The goal isn’t to redo your whole feeding program, just to fine-tune it so your cattle can do well with what’s already there.
Start by focusing more on energy than protein. Spring grass usually has plenty of protein, but that doesn’t mean it’s balanced. Often, energy is what’s missing, especially with lush, wet forage. Adding a digestible energy source, like molasses tubs or cubes, can help rumen microbes work better and improve feed efficiency. If you see loose manure or uneven gains, that’s often your first sign.
Next, review your mineral program closely. This is where a lot of cattle performance can quietly slip in the spring. Make sure cattle are actually eating minerals regularly, about 2 to 4 ounces per head per day, and check if your mineral mix fits current conditions. Lush grass can mean cattle need more magnesium, and in areas with known issues, using more available mineral sources can help.
Don’t overlook supplement delivery. Sometimes the issue is placement, not product. Move mineral feeders closer to water, along travel paths, or rotate their location to boost intake.
Finally, keep an eye on what’s actually happening instead of just assuming things are fine. Look for patterns in supplement use, manure consistency, and body condition. Spring forage changes quickly, so as it matures from early to late May, your feeding plan should change too.

Warning Signs to Watch For: When Your Program Is Out of Sync

If you want to know if your cattle feeding program is working right now, don’t just look at the feed label. Watch your cattle. They’ll show you when something isn’t right, especially in May when lush spring grass in West Texas can hide nutrition problems that aren’t obvious at first. This is where understanding cattle nutrition means looking at what your herd is actually using, not just what’s on paper. (If you’ve read our post on Feed Tag vs What Your Cows Actually Use, you already know why that matters.)
Here are the biggest red flags to keep an eye on right now:
  • Loose or runny manure is often one of the first signs that something isn’t balanced. With high-protein, high-moisture forage, cattle can come up short on energy, which hurts digestion and feed efficiency.
  • Declining body condition, even when grass is green, is one of the most misleading signs. Cows might look full, but if they’re losing condition compared to 30 days ago, your supplement plan probably needs to be adjusted.
  • Reduced mineral intake is another big clue. If feeders are staying full longer than usual, cattle aren’t getting the minerals they need, no matter how good the product is.
  • Uneven calf growth usually points back to inconsistent nutrition at the cow level. Some pairs thrive while others lag, and that gap tends to widen over time.
  • Dull hair coats or a rough appearance are often early signs of mineral deficiencies, even when pasture conditions look ideal.
These problems don’t usually appear overnight, so they’re easy to miss. But if you spot them early, you can make small changes to keep your cattle nutrition program on track and working as it should.

Actionable Tips: What You Can Do Today

If your herd feels a little “off” right now but you can’t figure out why, you’re not alone. The fix is usually simpler than you think. At this time of year, small changes to your cattle feeding program can make a big difference, especially as forage quality and nutrition needs shift across West Texas and the Southern Plains. The key is to make things more efficient without making your supplement plan too complicated.
Start with the basics and actually look at what’s happening in your place:
  • Check your mineral feeders today. Are cattle consistently consuming them, or are they sitting full? If intake is off, it may be a placement issue or a sign that the formulation needs adjusting for spring conditions.
  • Pay attention to manure consistency this week. It’s one of the quickest, most honest indicators of how well your nutrition program is working—or not working.
  • Take a close look at body condition. Don’t just glance at your cows. Compare how they look now to 30 days ago and ask yourself if they’re improving.
  • If your pasture is really lush, consider adding a targeted energy source to balance things out and support better utilization of that green forage.
  • When you’re checking pasture, don’t just evaluate grass—watch how your cattle are performing on that grass. That’s where the real story is.
  • Try not to change everything at once. Make one adjustment, see how it works, and then decide what to do next.
  • And don’t forget, another seasonal shift is right around the corner, so what you do now should set you up for early summer.
If you want a deeper look at how forage quality changes through the season and impacts cattle nutrition, this resource from NRCS is worth a read.

Wrap-Up: Don’t Let Good Grass Fool You

May can fool even experienced cattle producers, which is why it’s so important to get your cattle nutrition and supplement plan right now. Pastures are green, forage is plentiful, and cattle look content, but appearances can be misleading. Just because things look good doesn’t mean your herd is performing as it should. This is often when small problems in your feeding program start to add up in ways that are easy to miss but can become costly over time.
The same winter supplement plan that helped your cows in February can now quietly hold them back if you haven’t adjusted it for changing forage. Instead of clear problems, you’ll notice subtle gaps: cows not gaining as they should, calves growing unevenly, or a mineral program that looks good on paper but isn’t working in the pasture. These aren’t problems you see right away—they show up as missed chances.
The real difference is awareness and timing. Watching cattle performance, knowing how spring forage affects nutrition, and making small, thoughtful changes to your feeding program can keep things on track. You don’t need a complicated system or a total overhaul—just a willingness to pay attention to what’s happening in your pasture right now.
In West Texas and the Southern Plains, the producers who stay ahead of seasonal changes are the ones who protect both performance and profits. In May, that advantage starts with realizing that what worked in February isn’t meant to work now. Adjusting your approach is what keeps your operation ahead.