What are your cows eating? Cookies, ice cream, and more…
The Midwest drought has withered the nation's corn crop and pushed prices up. Now, the market for alternative feed for cattle is skyrocketing — sending farmers scrambling for cheaper alternatives, like gummy worms and ice cream sprinkles.
The Midwest drought has withered the nation’s corn crop and pushed up corn prices — sending livestock farmers in search of alternatives to feed their cattle. But as the market for alternative feed rations escalates, dairy producers and feed lot brokers are searching for cheaper options.
Some brokers have gathered up discarded food products and sold them to the highest bidder. Some of the sugary sweet foods your cows are digesting on? Cookies and gummy worms for starters. And there are a whole lot of other foods you might be surprised to learn cows consume. Check out a list below:
Distillers grains, a byproduct from ethanol manufacturing.
Cottonseed hulls
Soy hulls
Corn stalks
Rice products
French fries
Peanut pellet
Wheat middlings (a byproduct of milling wheat for flour)
Cookies
Gummy worms
Marshmallows
Fruit Loops
Orange peels
Dried cranberries
Cereal
Chocolate
Ice cream
Ice cream sprinkles
Turnips
Sugar beet by-products
Take a listen to reporter Sarah Gardner’s story on the surprising food items farmers are feeding their cattle.