Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

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Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby TNcowman » Fri Aug 14, 2009 8:49 am

Looking for advice on culling older cattle from my herd of 25 cows.I have three or four older ones that seem to have foot problems (limping) several times a year. They seem to be ok after several weeks but come up lame again in a two to three months. Is this the start of bigger problems? Calves look fair compared to others but some starting to breed back slower.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby dun » Fri Aug 14, 2009 8:53 am

All three are reasons for them to grow wheels. The age isn;t an issue, some cows are old at 5 and some are young at 15.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby Red Bull Breeder » Fri Aug 14, 2009 8:59 am

You gave all the right awnsers to you own question.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby 3waycross » Fri Aug 14, 2009 9:03 am

What the other guys said.

The other reason to cull them now is. They can go from a $.52 a lb cow to a $.30 a lb cow overnight. Don't wait until they are almost a downer. Sell them while they still look like they have some life left in them and reinvest the money in replacements.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby Douglas » Fri Aug 14, 2009 9:05 am

This is a very good question. I am also new to this. I kept 10 replacement from last year and need to cull that many this year. The first two or three are easy after that i have no clue as i don't have good records. My thinking is to base it on this year's calves. Keep the ones with the best calves that were born when i expected them to be.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby talldog » Fri Aug 14, 2009 9:08 am

I agree with Dun---You're as old as you feel--Humans or cows !! :tiphat:
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby dun » Fri Aug 14, 2009 9:13 am

talldog wrote:You're as old as you feel--Humans or cows !! :tiphat:


Not true. I'm far from the 100 plus I feel this morning.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby brandonm_13 » Fri Aug 14, 2009 9:22 am

dun wrote:
talldog wrote:You're as old as you feel--Humans or cows !! :tiphat:


Not true. I'm far from the 100 plus I feel this morning.

Are you sure? :banana:
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby dun » Fri Aug 14, 2009 9:38 am

brandonm_13 wrote:
dun wrote:
talldog wrote:You're as old as you feel--Humans or cows !! :tiphat:


Not true. I'm far from the 100 plus I feel this morning.

Are you sure? :banana:

Not even quite 3/4 of the way there yet.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby kenny thomas » Fri Aug 14, 2009 8:47 pm

All the above reasons plus any attitude problems. Something to keep in mind, 28 out of the last 28 years cull cows got cheaper in October and November.
My thoughts only, don't bet the farm on them. KT 2009
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby MoGal » Sat Aug 15, 2009 1:30 pm

It really is to your advantage to keep good records..... how else will you remember (from last year or the year before) who weaned off a nice calf or had a dink one? In this economy, you need every extra dime and I'd rather have cows that raise good calves. When I had six cows it was easy to keep up with.... not any more. Only half of them are named and the other half I go by their ear tag #, but I can tell you how much their calf weighed at weaning and what they had and what day and half of the breed back dates as well.

Also, not added yet, but an important one, is the cow's udder.... did the newborn have a hard time nursing??? too big of teats, empty quarter??
That would be another reason for culling (unless you got lots of time to make sure that calf can nurse and want to be bothered by it).
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby nap » Sun Aug 16, 2009 7:08 am

I totally agree with Mogal on the need for keeping good records. One thing I look for is if they start backing their breeding cycle. If it takes an extra heat to get them bred fine, if it takes an extra two heats or they don't come in heat they need to be culled.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby Caustic Burno » Sun Aug 16, 2009 12:36 pm

I Believe in Hope Eternal.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby HerefordSire » Sun Aug 16, 2009 2:31 pm

TNcowman wrote:Looking for advice on culling older cattle from my herd of 25 cows.I have three or four older ones that seem to have foot problems (limping) several times a year. They seem to be ok after several weeks but come up lame again in a two to three months. Is this the start of bigger problems? Calves look fair compared to others but some starting to breed back slower.


The following logic doesn't take into the consideration of taxes, insurance, depreciation, and interest, etc, unless you place these sums in the total overhead category below.

What is the cost basis of the 4 older problem cows?

What is the cost basis of the 21 younger problem free cows?

My definition of cost basis: say you paid $1,000 for a cow. She had three marketable calves each sold at $500. She consumed $2,000 worth of grass, feed, minerals, healh care, pasture cost, etc. over five years. Therefore, her cost basis is what was paid to have her minus what her calves brought.

Price paid...... = $1,000
Total Overhead = $2,000
-----------------------------
Cash Out........ = $3,000
Cash In.......... = $1,500
-----------------------------
Cost Basis....... = $1,500

If I had a cow with a cost basis of $1,500 and she produced three more calves I was able to sell for $500 a piece, I could break even in four more years and still have her. Therefore, if you cull a cow before you breakeven, including the cash you got from her on a sell, you are in effect, guaranteeing you will lose money on that cow. In other words, there is no possible way you can make money on that specific cow. The cow is history.


You should be able to figure out the rest and don't forget to calculate opportunity cost...what you would do with the money you received if you sold the 4 older cows right away.
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Re: Need advice on Culling older cattle - what to look for

Postby Douglas » Mon Aug 17, 2009 8:31 am

I have to respectifully disagree with you Hereford on that analysis. The past cost are sunk and never coming back no matter what the current decision. The only important question is future revenue and future costs. You should always take the course of action that max. the future revenue and min. the future cost, or max. the difference.
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