Big Swede
Well-known member
It never ceases to amaze me what happens in the feeder calf market most every year. For most of my life we started calving about March 1st and weaned in October and sold backgrounded calves weighing around 750-800 pounds in January. When corn was really cheap some years we would take those same calves to finish at 1200# in May. For years I would watch light green 500-600 pound calves sell in the spring for nearly as many dollars as my heavy calves and scratch my head and wonder what were those buyers thinking. They were getting 200 extra pounds for very little money. That told me that I just wasted a lot of money to put on 200 extra pounds.
Well, I start getting a little older and calving in blizzards and slop seems much less appealing to me so I start calving in May. No night checks, very little sickness, no frozen feet or ears, less death loss, cows go to grass and do their thing. Now I'm the guy selling 500-600 pounders and the market demands calves that can go to grass this spring and buyers are willing to pay nearly what 800# calves are worth. By the time you figure how much more corn it takes to get those calves to 800# the dollars taken home is basically the same for both groups of calves. That doesn't even take into consideration how much less feed it takes in the cow herd by calving later. That's where the biggest savings are. For those who background calves, you really need to run the numbers.
For years I would just shake my head at sale time at what those smaller calves would bring but I finally decided that I don't make the rules but I just as well follow them and take advantage of them.
Any thoughts?
Well, I start getting a little older and calving in blizzards and slop seems much less appealing to me so I start calving in May. No night checks, very little sickness, no frozen feet or ears, less death loss, cows go to grass and do their thing. Now I'm the guy selling 500-600 pounders and the market demands calves that can go to grass this spring and buyers are willing to pay nearly what 800# calves are worth. By the time you figure how much more corn it takes to get those calves to 800# the dollars taken home is basically the same for both groups of calves. That doesn't even take into consideration how much less feed it takes in the cow herd by calving later. That's where the biggest savings are. For those who background calves, you really need to run the numbers.
For years I would just shake my head at sale time at what those smaller calves would bring but I finally decided that I don't make the rules but I just as well follow them and take advantage of them.
Any thoughts?