Winter is upon us. Many areas of the dairy need extra attention during the winter months to prevent broken pipes, sick calves, frozen water and, of course, mastitis.

Prevention is the key to a low-stress winter! Taking a few simple steps now to prevent a mastitis outbreak will save you money and headaches in the future. The foundation of mastitis control during the winter is milking clean, dry udders and teats. Sounds simple, right? Mastitis is often a problem in the winter, because it is more difficult to keep cows clean and the wet environment supports bacteria growth. As always, it is important to maintain an adequate amount of clean bedding in stalls or bedded packs. During the winter months, it is often necessary to bed and groom stalls more regularly. Wet bedding can easily grow mastitis-causing pathogens, as well as cause cows to become dirty.

It is also important to reduce hair on the udder to control soil, bedding and manure accumulation on the skin. A high somatic cell count is directly correlated to poor udder cleanliness. Fall is the time to trim or flame udders. Keeping the hair trimmed all year-round eliminates one more chore to do this time of the year.

During winter months, producers tend to skip a very important part of mastitis control: post-dipping. Post-dipping is an essential part of mastitis control. Frostbite is a concern when post-dipping cows in the winter. When the wind is howling and temperatures are close to 10ºF, you may be tempted to skip the post-dip. An alternative strategy you could implement in the winter is to put post-dip on for a 30-second contact time, and then dry teats before sending cows out of the parlor. You will still get the protection of the post-dip, but won't run the risk of frostbitten teats. This practice will add some time to milking, but it only needs to be implemented in extremely cold weather.

Winter can be a tough time on producers and cows. Ease your stress by managing for mastitis year-round. Remember, prevention is the key! Keeping cows out of the wind, providing bedding that is clean and dry, ensuring udders are dry and maintaining a balanced ration will help your cows get through winter without mastitis, frostbite and problems from cold stress.  end mark

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Amber Yutzy is the dairy herd health educator for Pennsylvania State University Cooperative Extension.

This article originally appeared on the Pennsylvania State University Cooperative Extension website. View it here.