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5 Reasons Cattle Operations Are Hanging Fly Hunters - After Pour-Ons Quit By July
Flies cost U.S. cattle producers over $6 billion a year. That's lost gain. Lower milk. Cattle bunched up fighting flies instead of grazing.
And you've already paid for pour-ons, tags, and sprays that quit working by July.
You don't need another program to run. You need something that works 24/7 without you. Here's why working operations hang Fly Hunters around their lots and barns.
Every method you've tried adds work. Pour-ons mean running cattle through the chute. Sprays mean doing it again next week. Feed-through means managing intake all season.
The Fly Hunter takes seconds. Add water. Hang it. Done.
It works around the clock, in any weather - while you're checking fence or hauling to the sale barn. Your fly defense never clocks out.
Here's the math. A fly lays her eggs in fresh manure within minutes of it hitting the ground. Egg to biting adult in about 10 days. Kill the flies on your cattle today, and a new crop is already hatching in the lot.
Trouble starts at 200 flies per animal. By July, you'll see over a thousand on a single cow.
Spraying the herd never catches up. Each Fly Hunter pulls 10,000+ flies out of the cycle - for good. Fewer breeders now means fewer flies next week.
Pour-ons and tags have a problem: flies build resistance to them, a little more every year. That's why they fade by midsummer.
And the face fly - the one that spreads pinkeye and can blind a cow - barely lands on the animal at all. It feeds at the eye and leaves. Sprays and tags never touch it.
Feed-through has its own catch: it only works if every animal within a couple miles is on it. Good luck coordinating that with the place down the road.
The Fly Hunter skips all of it. The bait is food and feed-grade - nothing on your cattle, nothing in the feed, nothing for flies to outsmart. They fly in. They don't fly out.
This isn't a patio gadget. Each trap holds 10,000+ flies - twice the size of the bags at the farm store. It keeps pulling for weeks, not days.
Hang them where the flies are: by the manure pile, along the pens, at the property line where the neighbor's flies cross in. Flies travel up to 2 miles to feed - stop them before they reach your herd.
When a trap's full, cut it down, toss it, hang a fresh one. No hosing out containers between chores.
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