my older sis used to AI all there cows,she not a very tall lady,if she had to stretch to reach cow,they got jersey straw...over time it dropped overall height of the whole herd...amazing what 30 years of selective breeding does to a small herd...when she sold that herd...the heifers went into another herd and went to top 5% in first season...and it was a pretty good herd to begin with.
Yeah we try and do the same, aiming for a real nice cross herd. Our cows are somewhere up in the top % and perform really well which comes from such selective breeding.
I can’t edit my earlier statement but I went through my notebook and out of 45 wagyu calves last season we had 9 assist to different levels. And out of 180 calvings we had I think it was 6 assists of x bred.
This season was 5 wagyu assist and a handful of x bred assists of different levels.
thats still a very high percentage...good on you for making effort to make the girls life easier on them.
We did a ceasar on one of our good Hereford girls (she had started prolapsing) Irish vet said on a busy day he'd do 6 of these a day. Thats how valuable their cows are back home. He had just started to sew when he said" oh, there's another one in here"!
But anyway: here's the $$ vet call out, ceasar, consumables, three courses of Anti biotics, visit to sew up her prolapse - $1600. Just managed to break even when we sold her two calves at the March sales. In Feb her prolapse fell out again and I had to shoot her. Zero sum game.
Only had to pull two calves this year. One alive and one dead. Monster of a bloody thing for a poor heifer, and the coloring told us it was a fence jumping bastard that did the damage.
I'll take easy calving, good hooves and medium sized udders over massive weight gain any day
We had the vets here this year for something unrelated and they told us that morning on one farm they had 3 ceasers and a couple calvings. Possibly one of those corporate farms but they said they often do large numbers of ceasers on single farms. We are yet to have anything that bad thankfully. Some of ours are big calves, some are just lazy girls and we had the odd back to front upside down. Only needed one vet assist calving in the last 3 years for a very early slip that was very low. Vet just happened to be there so let him take care of it
Last edited by Chelsea; 23-11-2021 at 05:00 AM.
A close neighbor was a dairy rep for a stock company. I remember him saying "the best [most profitable] dairy farmers were the ones that concentrated on putting milk in the vat, not chasing bigger calves to sell".
Great tasting beef... another vote for dexter cattle, small steaks but tasty as.
Wagyu, the home kill fella said great steaks but you end up with a small mountain of very fatty mince.
With the right management you can have both, putting your lower index or potential culls to beef then your creating less waste. No point if breeding your no good cows for replacements.
We do extremely well production wise and have good replacements and a good number of money making calves plus we sell a number of replacements that are excess
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