Texas
California.
Louisiana
According to APHIS, the answer for 2007 is CALIFORNIA, followed by Wisconsin, then New York.
Lyle Smith has written: 'Economics of feeding cattle in south central and southern Alberta' -- subject(s): Beef cattle, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Feedlots, Feeding and feeds, Feedlots 'Economics of feeding cattle in north-central and northern Alberta' -- subject(s): Cattle, Cattle trade, Costs, Feeding and feeds 'A Vision for the Future'
No.
Money that ranchers get from selling their cattle, or money that is only to be spent on raising, feeding and caring for cattle, depending on how you look at it.
Herbert Windsor Mumford has written: 'Storage barn, sheds, feed lots and other equipment for feeding experimental cattle in car load lots' -- subject(s): Housing, Cattle, Design and construction 'Maintenance rations for beef breeding cows' -- subject(s): Beef cattle, Feeding and feeds 'Cooperative live-stock shipping' -- subject(s): Transportation, Cattle, Agriculture, Societies 'Economic factors in cattle feeding' -- subject(s): Feeding and feeds, Cattle 'Beef production' -- subject(s): Beef cattle, Cattle 'Feeds supplementary to corn for fattening steers' -- subject(s): Feeding and feeds, Swine, Cattle 'Comparison of silage and shock corn for wintering calves intended for beef production' -- subject(s): Feeding and feeds, Calves
Courtney Robert Kepler has written: 'Economic comparisons of selected cattle feeding regimes' -- subject(s): Cattle, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Cattle, Feeding and feeds
Gauchos
The geographic center of the cattle feeding industry began to shift from the Midwest to the southern plains states in 1972. By the 1980s the biggest cattle feeders were located primarily in Texas, Nebraska, Kansas, and Colorado.
A feeding trough for cattle is also called a feed bunk, a manger, or simply a feed trough. Everyone has their own preferences to what they call such an object where cattle eat their grain from, depending on language and region.