John SD
Well-known member
I pretty much spoke my piece on later calving in Big Swede's "Calving later?" thread. Here it is easy to click on. http://ranchers.net/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24616
At this point I would not go back to early calving Cetainly not much fun today with knee deep snow and below 0 temps around here, but there are guys out there doing it.
I just can't do stuff like I did when I was younger. Last summer during hay season I found out that a relatively simple electrical glitch with my pacemaker can put me on the sidelines real fast. My later calving season makes it so the cows can calve with minimal supervison or assistance if I go haywire.
I haven't even touched the calf puller for a couple years. I'm not sure if that is a side benefit of the later calving, or better selection of bulls and replacement heifers.
I do believe early calvers have bigger calves due to the increased circulation during the last trimester of calf development because of cold weather. Those cows out there in the weather today must have their internal furnaces cranked up on high. :wink:
At this point I would not go back to early calving Cetainly not much fun today with knee deep snow and below 0 temps around here, but there are guys out there doing it.
I just can't do stuff like I did when I was younger. Last summer during hay season I found out that a relatively simple electrical glitch with my pacemaker can put me on the sidelines real fast. My later calving season makes it so the cows can calve with minimal supervison or assistance if I go haywire.
I haven't even touched the calf puller for a couple years. I'm not sure if that is a side benefit of the later calving, or better selection of bulls and replacement heifers.
I do believe early calvers have bigger calves due to the increased circulation during the last trimester of calf development because of cold weather. Those cows out there in the weather today must have their internal furnaces cranked up on high. :wink: