Subscribe & Save 5% now + get Free Ground Beef with every order over $149 Learn more HERE

Grass-fed Beef in Ohio Winter?

posted on

November 29, 2025

    As winter approaches, we are often asked how we manage “grass-fed” cattle during the winter months.  It’s a fair question. After all, grass doesn’t grow in Ohio from November through March.  We solve this problem by feeding sun-cured grass, AKA hay.  We feed hay through the winter in the form of dry round bales and wrapped baleage.  Modern technology in harvesting equipment has made baleage possible. This fermented form of grass is a significant benefit for the health of cattle.  Grass is harvested and baled at a higher moisture content, then wrapped.  The fermentation that occurs makes the nutrients more bioavailable for the cattle. 

baleage-wrapped-copy.jpg
Baleage Being Made

    Year-round, we supplement with essential minerals and apple cider vinegar. This plays a key role to balance the pH of the cattle’s digestive system, thus allowing them to access more of the nutrients from the hay and baleage.  To offer perspective, we feed several thousand gallons of apple cider vinegar to our cattle annually.  It is a costly program, but the end result is second to none. 

baleage-cattle-eating.jpg
Feeding hay and baleage is a daily chore


    Another way we solve the “lack of grass” problem is to butcher cattle mostly during the grass-growing seasons.  Over 75% of our cattle are butchered April through October.  We build an inventory of this beef and then supplement with less frequent butcher dates December through March.  Some cattle perform very well on hay and baleage through the winter.  Only these top performers are chosen for butchering during these months.

    Even though the grass is green in Ohio for only seven months, our year-round grass-fed beef operation thrives on fine-tuned forage, mineral and butchering management. 

Hope this answers some of those questions!  😉 Dustin

More from the blog

Why We Don't "Market" ZOE Farms

The modern farm-to-fork marketing model looks good on the surface, but when you really examine it, it starts to resemble a pyramid scheme. Most food businesses today spend heavily on customer acquisition through sponsored listings, paid ads, influencers, discount codes, and referral incentives. All of that money has to come...

Can you really taste nutrient density?

People ask me why our food tastes different. Why the chicken skin tastes richer. Why the beef has a deeper flavor. Why the eggs taste like the ones they remember from childhood. I always come back to a simple idea: flavor is the biological signature of nutrient density.