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Cattle Boards
Breeding / Calving Issues
Early or late calving?
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<blockquote data-quote="Alberta farmer" data-source="post: 613662" data-attributes="member: 8978"><p>At one time we calved very early, January/February(we were a purebred outfit). When we went totally commercial we moved them back to start on May 1st. We do not sell calves anymore.</p><p>In Alberta we don't have as many options as our southern neighbors. Brutally cold and snowy winters kind of make it tricky!</p><p>When we calved in January/February the cows were checked every two hours and any cow calving went into a barn. We could accomodate 26 pairs if we had to...and lots of times we had that many in! It was a lot of work.</p><p>Of course frozen ears could be a problem, and after all, we all know ears are the most expensive part of an animal? If you don't believe me just take a calf to the sale with frozen ears...about a 10-15 cent discount on a 600 lb steer. If those ears weigh 1/2 lb. you lost $60 to $90! Therefore those ears are worth about $120-$180 a pound! Of course the buyers have some BS excuse for this about foundering or something, but over the years I've fed out a few short eared calves and never had any problem with them! It always amazes me how the buyers can pick out any little fault and discount the he!! out of an animal when you know it is total BS!</p><p>I had a yearling steer last year go through the ring that was a wee bit lame...probably from getting the crap beat out of him back in the pens! The buyers figured they'd better discount him 50 cents/lb. until I stood up and said pass him. Then one really generous buyer said well I'll give you 70 cents(the going rate was 95 cents) and I said so everyone could hear "I'd rather feed him to the coyotes than let you SOBs steal him!" A lot of farmers/ranchers actually clapped after my little speech! </p><p>After a couple of days at home he was all healed up and the next week I took him to another sale barn and sold him for 96 cents!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Alberta farmer, post: 613662, member: 8978"] At one time we calved very early, January/February(we were a purebred outfit). When we went totally commercial we moved them back to start on May 1st. We do not sell calves anymore. In Alberta we don't have as many options as our southern neighbors. Brutally cold and snowy winters kind of make it tricky! When we calved in January/February the cows were checked every two hours and any cow calving went into a barn. We could accomodate 26 pairs if we had to...and lots of times we had that many in! It was a lot of work. Of course frozen ears could be a problem, and after all, we all know ears are the most expensive part of an animal? If you don't believe me just take a calf to the sale with frozen ears...about a 10-15 cent discount on a 600 lb steer. If those ears weigh 1/2 lb. you lost $60 to $90! Therefore those ears are worth about $120-$180 a pound! Of course the buyers have some BS excuse for this about foundering or something, but over the years I've fed out a few short eared calves and never had any problem with them! It always amazes me how the buyers can pick out any little fault and discount the he!! out of an animal when you know it is total BS! I had a yearling steer last year go through the ring that was a wee bit lame...probably from getting the crap beat out of him back in the pens! The buyers figured they'd better discount him 50 cents/lb. until I stood up and said pass him. Then one really generous buyer said well I'll give you 70 cents(the going rate was 95 cents) and I said so everyone could hear "I'd rather feed him to the coyotes than let you SOBs steal him!" A lot of farmers/ranchers actually clapped after my little speech! After a couple of days at home he was all healed up and the next week I took him to another sale barn and sold him for 96 cents! [/QUOTE]
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