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Hereford bulls on those black cows $$$$$$$$$
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<blockquote data-quote="S&amp;amp;S Farms" data-source="post: 653956" data-attributes="member: 6262"><p>Circle A Angus Ranch teamed up with the American Hereford Association (AHA) in 2007 to determine and measure the advantage of using Hereford bulls on Angus-based cows. The results were impressive. The data was collected by Circle A staff and analyzed by Dan Moser, associate professor of genetics at Kansas State University and Vern Pierce, professor of agricultural economics at University of Missouri.</p><p>Here are the highlights:</p><p></p><p>600 Angus cows were randomly bred to 10 Hereford bulls. The resulting progeny was compared to the offspring from three proven Angus sires.</p><p></p><p>The Hereford-sired calves were 3 lb. heavier than the Angus calves at birth. But averaging 72 lb., the weight was nearly ideal for commercial operations.</p><p></p><p>At weaning, the Hereford-sired calves were 11.9 lb. heavier than the Angus-sired calves, despite the Angus sires ranking in the top 20% of their breed for weaning weight EPD.</p><p></p><p>Heifer calves were bred with the baldies showing a 7% advantage in conception rates over the straight Angus heifers.</p><p></p><p>75 of the Hereford-sired bred heifers were sold at Circle A's annual production sale, where they sold for about $110 more than their Angus counterparts.</p><p></p><p>Part of the steers were placed on feed efficiency test at Circle A's feedlot. The Hereford-sired calves outgained the Angus by .15 lb. per day.</p><p></p><p>While both breed groups were similar for fat thickness (Angus = 0.52 vs. Hereford = 0.54), Hereford-sired steers had about 13 more lb. of carcass weight and about 3/4 of an inch more ribeye area.</p><p>Pierce set up an economic model to measure the advantages of this data for a typical operation. He says the advantage of using Herefords will be multiplied over the 10-year model.</p><p>In the model using Hereford bulls on Angus-based cows will add $514 net over 10 years or about $51 per year per cow.</p><p></p><p>Economic models also predicted that if replacement females were retained over a period of 10 years, Hereford-sired females would generate a 20% advantage in herd size for the same relative cost versus the straight Angus commercial cows because of increased fertility and longevity.</p><p>Pierce says, "The bottom line is if a rancher with Angus-based cows uses Hereford bulls compared to using Angus bulls and gets the same response as we had in this study, he will have improved cash flow, increased herd size and more calves to sell over a 10-year period."</p><p></p><p></p><p>Something to chew on </p><p></p><p>Jeff</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="S&S Farms, post: 653956, member: 6262"] Circle A Angus Ranch teamed up with the American Hereford Association (AHA) in 2007 to determine and measure the advantage of using Hereford bulls on Angus-based cows. The results were impressive. The data was collected by Circle A staff and analyzed by Dan Moser, associate professor of genetics at Kansas State University and Vern Pierce, professor of agricultural economics at University of Missouri. Here are the highlights: 600 Angus cows were randomly bred to 10 Hereford bulls. The resulting progeny was compared to the offspring from three proven Angus sires. The Hereford-sired calves were 3 lb. heavier than the Angus calves at birth. But averaging 72 lb., the weight was nearly ideal for commercial operations. At weaning, the Hereford-sired calves were 11.9 lb. heavier than the Angus-sired calves, despite the Angus sires ranking in the top 20% of their breed for weaning weight EPD. Heifer calves were bred with the baldies showing a 7% advantage in conception rates over the straight Angus heifers. 75 of the Hereford-sired bred heifers were sold at Circle A’s annual production sale, where they sold for about $110 more than their Angus counterparts. Part of the steers were placed on feed efficiency test at Circle A’s feedlot. The Hereford-sired calves outgained the Angus by .15 lb. per day. While both breed groups were similar for fat thickness (Angus = 0.52 vs. Hereford = 0.54), Hereford-sired steers had about 13 more lb. of carcass weight and about 3/4 of an inch more ribeye area. Pierce set up an economic model to measure the advantages of this data for a typical operation. He says the advantage of using Herefords will be multiplied over the 10-year model. In the model using Hereford bulls on Angus-based cows will add $514 net over 10 years or about $51 per year per cow. Economic models also predicted that if replacement females were retained over a period of 10 years, Hereford-sired females would generate a 20% advantage in herd size for the same relative cost versus the straight Angus commercial cows because of increased fertility and longevity. Pierce says, “The bottom line is if a rancher with Angus-based cows uses Hereford bulls compared to using Angus bulls and gets the same response as we had in this study, he will have improved cash flow, increased herd size and more calves to sell over a 10-year period.” Something to chew on Jeff [/QUOTE]
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