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What to look for in a bull?
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<blockquote data-quote="Aero" data-source="post: 143550" data-attributes="member: 2076"><p>Rosie:</p><p>you can use this page for young bulls to figure out what you are looking at for EPDs. <a href="http://www.angus.org/sireeval/brekdown.html?epd_parent_ct=4" target="_blank">http://www.angus.org/sireeval/brekdown. ... arent_ct=4</a></p><p> if you want to find a bull with good all-around EPDs, i suggest you use my WAR calculator. <a href="http://hilltopangus.net/downloads/WARIndex.pdf" target="_blank">http://hilltopangus.net/downloads/WARIndex.pdf</a> dont worry about the CBI. and if you dont understand the EPD, give it a value of "0". For heifers, if you have a BW EPD of <+2.0 and a CED > 7, you should be in good shape for calving ease.</p><p></p><p>the numbers you are quoting above sounds very good for a low input operation. If the bull is sound, numbers like this make for a pretty easy keeper. you might be giving up some cash selling calves, but it should come along with less work and supplementation costs. </p><p></p><p>what kind of operation are you wanting to run? feeder calf? retained ownership, etc? this is a key before selecting a bull.</p><p></p><p>cypress:</p><p>to be exact in what a +2.0 is means that calves should 2 lbs heavier than the Angus breed average birth weight of 1979. At the page cited above, you will see that +2.3 is average for Nonparent Angus bulls.</p><p></p><p>Frankie:</p><p>you technically should be able to guess a certain weight for 2 parents directly from EPDs. this will have a high rate of error, but its the best guess. if you can know what the average weight during an EPD baseline year, you can use it to guess what the real measurement should be. this will almost 100% be wrong because of environmental factors, accuracy of EPDs, creep vs non-creep, etc. but you <em>technically</em>can guess a real number for BW, WW, YW, etc.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Aero, post: 143550, member: 2076"] Rosie: you can use this page for young bulls to figure out what you are looking at for EPDs. [url=http://www.angus.org/sireeval/brekdown.html?epd_parent_ct=4]http://www.angus.org/sireeval/brekdown. ... arent_ct=4[/url] if you want to find a bull with good all-around EPDs, i suggest you use my WAR calculator. [url=http://hilltopangus.net/downloads/WARIndex.pdf]http://hilltopangus.net/downloads/WARIndex.pdf[/url] dont worry about the CBI. and if you dont understand the EPD, give it a value of "0". For heifers, if you have a BW EPD of <+2.0 and a CED > 7, you should be in good shape for calving ease. the numbers you are quoting above sounds very good for a low input operation. If the bull is sound, numbers like this make for a pretty easy keeper. you might be giving up some cash selling calves, but it should come along with less work and supplementation costs. what kind of operation are you wanting to run? feeder calf? retained ownership, etc? this is a key before selecting a bull. cypress: to be exact in what a +2.0 is means that calves should 2 lbs heavier than the Angus breed average birth weight of 1979. At the page cited above, you will see that +2.3 is average for Nonparent Angus bulls. Frankie: you technically should be able to guess a certain weight for 2 parents directly from EPDs. this will have a high rate of error, but its the best guess. if you can know what the average weight during an EPD baseline year, you can use it to guess what the real measurement should be. this will almost 100% be wrong because of environmental factors, accuracy of EPDs, creep vs non-creep, etc. but you [i]technically[/i]can guess a real number for BW, WW, YW, etc. [/QUOTE]
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