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Our experience selling at stockyards...
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<blockquote data-quote="Fire Sweep Ranch" data-source="post: 961117" data-attributes="member: 18809"><p>OK, so most of our stock is sold privately or at state breed sales. Every once in awhile we take something to the stockyards (like, once a year!). Earlier this year, we took a freemartin heifer and felt like we got bottom dollar for her. We sent her records with her as far as vaccinations and such, and still got lower than most. So, we had one extra steer I needed to get rid of before winter. I tried selling him on Craigslist or trading him for hay, but got no serious bites. So I took him to Joplin stockyard, WITH all of his weaning and vaccinating records. They advised not to commingle, since he had been weaned for 30 days and was on feed. OK, so sell him as a single. I checked the website to see how the prices were on Monday, and felt good about the bottom end bringing $1.45. I figured I would get at least that much. Well, imagine my surprise when my 510 pound steer (which was about 50 pounds less than what I had him at) went for $1.10! I was ticked off to say the least. So I called today, and after several minutes on hold to a very nice man, I was informed that when he came into the ring he was lame and could not walk well, so the auctioneer set his floor and took the first bidder. They guy I talked on the phone to called the bidder, and the bidder said that calf, other than the lameness, was every bit of a healthy good flesh calf. So the stockyard is going to pay the difference is what he brought and the bottom for that day ($1.35). So I feel a little better. But what if I did not call and ask why he brought so little? Anyone else ever have this happen? I am glad I called, and will use them again knowing they will work with you, but the best they could figure is he got bumped around and hurt there somehow because he walked off the trailer as sound as a cat!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Fire Sweep Ranch, post: 961117, member: 18809"] OK, so most of our stock is sold privately or at state breed sales. Every once in awhile we take something to the stockyards (like, once a year!). Earlier this year, we took a freemartin heifer and felt like we got bottom dollar for her. We sent her records with her as far as vaccinations and such, and still got lower than most. So, we had one extra steer I needed to get rid of before winter. I tried selling him on Craigslist or trading him for hay, but got no serious bites. So I took him to Joplin stockyard, WITH all of his weaning and vaccinating records. They advised not to commingle, since he had been weaned for 30 days and was on feed. OK, so sell him as a single. I checked the website to see how the prices were on Monday, and felt good about the bottom end bringing $1.45. I figured I would get at least that much. Well, imagine my surprise when my 510 pound steer (which was about 50 pounds less than what I had him at) went for $1.10! I was ticked off to say the least. So I called today, and after several minutes on hold to a very nice man, I was informed that when he came into the ring he was lame and could not walk well, so the auctioneer set his floor and took the first bidder. They guy I talked on the phone to called the bidder, and the bidder said that calf, other than the lameness, was every bit of a healthy good flesh calf. So the stockyard is going to pay the difference is what he brought and the bottom for that day ($1.35). So I feel a little better. But what if I did not call and ask why he brought so little? Anyone else ever have this happen? I am glad I called, and will use them again knowing they will work with you, but the best they could figure is he got bumped around and hurt there somehow because he walked off the trailer as sound as a cat! [/QUOTE]
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