High-tech dairy machinery has great potential

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Cows continue to eat as Juno, a robotic feed pusher, glides along the side at the Groetsch's family dairy farm in Albany, Minnesota, August 9, 2012. (Megan Tan/Minneapolis Star Tribune/MCT)
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If a cow is not ready to be milked again, the robot withholds the treat, opens the door and sends the cow on her way.

The robot knows when a cow has broken a milk hose, when its cleaning solution has run low, and when it hasn’t seen a particular cow in a while. But its self-awareness has limits: For some problems, it phones the farmer.

The Groetsches still have to ensure that the machines are cleaning up after themselves, that bullies in the herd aren’t blocking access to the robot, and that bovine health is not compromised. They still rely on a nutritionist and a veterinarian, and they redesigned their barn to make it more comfortable for the cows.

“This system works best if you think about re-creating your whole approach,” said Janice Siegford, a Michigan State University professor who studies robotic milking.

Now, researchers say, milking technology might turn the tables and help reinvent the cow. Robots have difficulty finding teats on hairy udders or teats with unusual spacing. As a result, farmers might breed cows for perfect teat placement; cows that can’t learn the robot system might not make the cut. Some farmers might even advertise their cows as robot-ready when they go to market.

Of course, strategic breeding is nothing new. Dairy farmers have consistently chosen high-producing cows. Along with improvements in nutrition, farm management and machinery, genetic selection has produced a roughly three-fold increase in milk production per cow since the early 1950s.

Groetsch thinks she and her family will choose robot-friendly cows as breeders in the future, but for now they’re still adjusting to life on a robotic farm.

So far, one of their biggest victories has been convincing her 89-year-old father-in-law, who milked cows during the Depression, that the technology works. He sat for hours watching the robot. Finally he said, “You know? It gets better every day.”

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