I have spent the last four days at the Establicimento San Marcos S.A., commonly known here as Los Potros - the feedlots. Despite spending a month in the Formosa, and witnessing the open-air nature of the cattle industry in Argentina, I for some reason had it in my mind that a feedlot would be a contained indoor environment. That bubble was quickly burst upon my arrival at Los Potros.
The feedlots are no more than a collection of outdoor paddocks where cattle of different maturation or sex are divided and fed twice a day to meet optimal growth standards for the climate.
Ameghino is still extremely flat and is lacking the array of palm trees that covered the landscape of the North. Fall is in the air and the trees that are here, mainly in the town, have had their leaves turn yellow and start to fall. Many of the same land management methods practiced at Salvacion are evident in the landscape here in the central-south, though with their own unique flair. For example, there are few grazing herds, and those that are grazing are high-calibre Bonsmara herds, of which the offspring will often find themselves going to Salvacion to improve the genetic pool of the animals in the North. The water retention systems are similar with holding pools and pipe dispersal systems, however the water here is pumped up from the ground aquifers powered by quaint windmills across the property. Drought is not as big of an issue at Los Potros.
At a feedlot, the focus is obviously feeding the animals continuously and with the appropriate feed. There are seven different classes of animals each identified in different paddocks. The animals receive a mix of minerals, whole corn, ground corn, ground hops, safflower pellets and silo based on the phase of finishing in which they are presently situated. Feeding the animals, of which there are currently about 5000 on the ranch, is an all day job, 365 days of the year.
Above are the rations for the different phases of the animal feeding. The weight and proportions of each element need to be documented for each of the paddocks. To do this, a tractor with a shovel poors the different feeds into a mixer behind another tractor. Silo is always the greatest proportion, so it goes in last. Once the mixer is full, the feeds are mixed until they take on a darer colour and then distributed to the different feeding troughs.
Silo is an important part of feeding for the animals in the fields too - especially the bulls. One day Johnny, one of the administrators at the feedlots, took me to herd bulls from one field to another with a pickup! It was much slower than with agile horses, but I was impressed that we were able to move the big animals where we wanted at all. Once we got them to their new destination, we had to cut away plastic to make the large rows of silo available for them to eat. The silo is protected by electric wire too, because if the animals were able to have full access to the silo rolls, which they sometimes do after breaing through the wires, they trample and break the plastic which results in the silo going rancid.
All the silo on the farm is from the acres and acres of crops San Marcos S.A. produces. The three main crops are corn, soya and sorghum. Corn and sorghum can be used for silo, but most of the silo I have seen so far has been corn silo.
Once the morning feeding was done, I was encouraged to drive the tractor back to its parking place for lunch. Who can say no to driving an expensive John Deer....do you think my tractor's sexy?And of course, I always like to finish the day visiting the horses. This gaucho is working hard to train a wild horse using this more docile one. He says it will take about six months. After riding the animals up North, I started to take it for granted that horses are just very docile and obedient creatures, when in reality it is the dedication and hard work put into them by the workers that make them so useful on the ranches.
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