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Newbie needs basic AI info
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<blockquote data-quote="Lucky_P" data-source="post: 1688154" data-attributes="member: 12607"><p>'Ive said it before, and I'll say it again... I see folks on here talking about having their veterinarian inseminate cows... when I was in practice, I never had time, and never knew any of my large animal veterinary colleagues who had time to be sitting around waiting for John Doe to call them to come inseminate his cow. Maybe times have changed, or those folks aren't as busy as we were, and are 'looking for things to do'. </p><p></p><p>I haven't lived where there was an 'AI tech' within 150 miles in 30 years. But, if you can find a good one, and you have just four cows... I'd sure go that route. </p><p>When we made the decision to incorporate AI into our breeding program, my wife - also a veterinarian - took an AI course through the local community college & regional university's Ag school. </p><p>I'm unaware of any veterinary college teaching AI... yeah, we learn the basics of anatomy, reproductive physiology and such, but to my knowledge, none of the veterinary colleges are teaching AI to their students... there's too much basic sciences, medicine & surgery training to cram into 4 short years to dedicate anything more than just a cursory overview, if that much, to AI.</p><p></p><p>Then, there's the 'practice' aspect. First year out... we got about a 30% pregnancy rate on our AI services(but this also included a short(and abysmal) dalliance with timed AI), but as she did more and more (and our nutrition program bot better), she got better... she ended up routinely getting 85-90% pregnancies to a single AI service.</p><p></p><p>As others have mentioned, you will need to purchase a tank, and keep it serviced year-round. Some bull studs will sell semen in as little as 5-straw lots, but most are gonna require a minimum 10-straw purchase of any particular bull. </p><p>And... even when all the stars align perfectly, you're not going to always get 100% pregnancy rates... we always had a cleanup bull to service the cows that didn't 'stick' on AI... and to breed the cows that weren't candidates for AI service to begin with.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lucky_P, post: 1688154, member: 12607"] 'Ive said it before, and I'll say it again... I see folks on here talking about having their veterinarian inseminate cows... when I was in practice, I never had time, and never knew any of my large animal veterinary colleagues who had time to be sitting around waiting for John Doe to call them to come inseminate his cow. Maybe times have changed, or those folks aren't as busy as we were, and are 'looking for things to do'. I haven't lived where there was an 'AI tech' within 150 miles in 30 years. But, if you can find a good one, and you have just four cows... I'd sure go that route. When we made the decision to incorporate AI into our breeding program, my wife - also a veterinarian - took an AI course through the local community college & regional university's Ag school. I'm unaware of any veterinary college teaching AI... yeah, we learn the basics of anatomy, reproductive physiology and such, but to my knowledge, none of the veterinary colleges are teaching AI to their students... there's too much basic sciences, medicine & surgery training to cram into 4 short years to dedicate anything more than just a cursory overview, if that much, to AI. Then, there's the 'practice' aspect. First year out... we got about a 30% pregnancy rate on our AI services(but this also included a short(and abysmal) dalliance with timed AI), but as she did more and more (and our nutrition program bot better), she got better... she ended up routinely getting 85-90% pregnancies to a single AI service. As others have mentioned, you will need to purchase a tank, and keep it serviced year-round. Some bull studs will sell semen in as little as 5-straw lots, but most are gonna require a minimum 10-straw purchase of any particular bull. And... even when all the stars align perfectly, you're not going to always get 100% pregnancy rates... we always had a cleanup bull to service the cows that didn't 'stick' on AI... and to breed the cows that weren't candidates for AI service to begin with. [/QUOTE]
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