Northern Rancher
Well-known member
Tiny framed and so short they have bad breath.
Northern Rancher said:Tiny framed and so short they have bad breath.
Grassfarmer said:Dylan Biggs said:per said:Totally agree with both. I would like to add or emphasize they must do everything above while doing the work of foraging in tough conditions without loosing undue condition.
I thought about that and relatively speaking I would agree but by the same token I have had some cows over the years that I always judged to be to thin but they always re-bred on time and raised good calves. I remember an old cow we had #109 born in born in 1981 she was an Angus Braunvieh cross not a big cow but you could honestly describe her as a cow that wore her working clothes very tight. Every year I was sure she would come in open but that didn't happen till she was 14. Now I am not saying that I want a herd of hard doing cows. But I have culled plenty of easy fleshing cows that didn't rebreed also. In fact the easiest fleshing cow I ever had on this place only raised four calves before failing to rebreed. What I conclude to date is that there may be a danger in assuming a very high correlation between ability to maintain BCS and fertility. Assuming that fertility automatically tags along with fleshing ability might get us into trouble.
At a certain level there appears to be a negative correlation between ability to maintain BCS and fertility. Bonsma stated something like "obesity reciprocating infertility and vice versa"
We are seeing this as well in our herd - I have one family that are extremely heavily fleshed, thus far at expense of milk production rather than fertility but the oldest cow is only 6 so there is still time. I've also had the wonder cow that milks heavy, goes through life leaner and still lasts to a ripe old age. I think both types are extremes and knowing what I know now I probably wouldn't keep replacements off either in future. As always the difficulty is finding the balance that works under your conditions - I really believe the philosophies of Larry Leonhardt and that we should be selecting our cattle around the average - it seems to go against human nature though to not pick the biggest, longest, heaviest fleshed or whatever. I'm trying to train myself to this new thinking but I'm a slow learner![]()
Northern Rancher said:Denny I have to agree-lets both mark our calendars.
Grassfarmer said:Dylan, I was trying to articulate that I actually wouldn't like to keep replacements off either. I didn't think my leaner fertile cow was really a "wonder cow" - I referred to her as that because she amazed me she kept re-breeding for as long. She surprised me because I have shipped many leaner type, mainly big milkers over the years for being open and I would have expected her to go the same way. Equally we also have shipped a number that had the reduced fertility associated with too heavy fleshing over the years (as well as the poor milkers that often go with this type too) My point was that I would now consider both these types to be extremes, outliers and I would be better off avoiding these types all together. We may not be able to judge these "fat" and "thin" types absolutely accurately as yearling heifers but in an awful lot of cases they are family characteristics. My plan is to cease selecting the outliers as much as I can and linebreed the in betweens as I think they are the ones that have the best chance of being survivors and producers that will do their job without being noticed in the herd.
Dylan Biggs said:One thing I have learned is that my eye can't predict the value of a heifer calf or a yearling heifer no matter how much I would like to think I can.
google Chirikof Island cattleNorthern Rancher said:It would be interesting to turn a group of cattle loose in an area that has winter graze and see what is still there in twenty years. I learned one thing touring Dylans- cattle can be grass fattened and not be smurfs. A lot of times perception is not reality.
Triangle Bar said:Dylan Biggs said:One thing I have learned is that my eye can't predict the value of a heifer calf or a yearling heifer no matter how much I would like to think I can.
That's for sure true. I saved a heifer that I regretted from almost the instant I made the decision to keep her. I thought for sure I'd be pulling her first calf or doing a vet job. As it turned out she has had six straight calves with no assistance. Like you said, sometimes you just have to go for it.
Thanks for your explanation Dylan, I think I better understand now what your goals and criteria are. It sounds like when you started this process there was a high percentage of cull & opens, but now that your down the road many years, your cull & open percentage is a comparable average to other operations.
I'm sure your management has also led to an even calf crop come fall, which is something I need to work on. I share my summer allotment with another rancher who runs his bulls year around, so even if I take my bulls out at 60 or 75 days I always have a drawn out calving season. I guess I could sell those late bred cows and put those dollars towards saving more heifers or buying something bred up closer.
Good Day
Feed the herd, sell the opens. Extra feeding shouldn't be an option except to get the animal in condition to sell.Grassfarmer said:Dylan, It must be my accent again :roll: , or my writing style as my intent is not to be argumentative or to prove who is right or wrong. I was just trying to explain my opinion and to learn.
I agree fertility is #1 in the list of things a successful cow needs but you ask is there such a thing as too much fertility? I would say yes, possibly there is. If for example we have a cow that maintains condition very poorly at all times but still somehow manages to breed back year after year she may require addition feeding, at additional cost - this would indirectly be a negative side to fertility wouldn't it? as fertility is the thing keeping her in the herd. Another cost may be adding her daughters to the herd if they had the same characteristics.
Of course this depends how you run your herd - how much "natural selection" we can really make in a country where most people are winter feeding cows around 200 days in my part of the world. If we really go with natural selection #1 is not fertility but survival. When we have bills to pay we need a calf every year - nature doesn't hence a lot of the deer don't rear young every year. But in our domesticated situation if the cows all get equal feed and anything that is lean is allowed to stay lean and come up open versus the herd where the leaner animals get fed a little extra feed because that is cheaper than having extra culls I guess that is natural selection. I'll admit we feed extra to some leaner cows although we have set the rule that any mature cow (over 2nd calver) that requires extra feeding 2 winters running will be eliminated from the purebred herd along with any offspring.
RobertMac said:Feed the herd, sell the opens. Extra feeding shouldn't be an option except to get the animal in condition to sell.Grassfarmer said:Dylan, It must be my accent again :roll: , or my writing style as my intent is not to be argumentative or to prove who is right or wrong. I was just trying to explain my opinion and to learn.
I agree fertility is #1 in the list of things a successful cow needs but you ask is there such a thing as too much fertility? I would say yes, possibly there is. If for example we have a cow that maintains condition very poorly at all times but still somehow manages to breed back year after year she may require addition feeding, at additional cost - this would indirectly be a negative side to fertility wouldn't it? as fertility is the thing keeping her in the herd. Another cost may be adding her daughters to the herd if they had the same characteristics.
Of course this depends how you run your herd - how much "natural selection" we can really make in a country where most people are winter feeding cows around 200 days in my part of the world. If we really go with natural selection #1 is not fertility but survival. When we have bills to pay we need a calf every year - nature doesn't hence a lot of the deer don't rear young every year. But in our domesticated situation if the cows all get equal feed and anything that is lean is allowed to stay lean and come up open versus the herd where the leaner animals get fed a little extra feed because that is cheaper than having extra culls I guess that is natural selection. I'll admit we feed extra to some leaner cows although we have set the rule that any mature cow (over 2nd calver) that requires extra feeding 2 winters running will be eliminated from the purebred herd along with any offspring.
Grassfarmer said:Dylan, It must be my accent again :roll: , or my writing style as my intent is not to be argumentative or to prove who is right or wrong. I was just trying to explain my opinion and to learn.
I agree fertility is #1 in the list of things a successful cow needs but you ask is there such a thing as too much fertility? I would say yes, possibly there is. If for example we have a cow that maintains condition very poorly at all times but still somehow manages to breed back year after year she may require addition feeding, at additional cost - this would indirectly be a negative side to fertility wouldn't it? as fertility is the thing keeping her in the herd. Another cost may be adding her daughters to the herd if they had the same characteristics.
Of course this depends how you run your herd - how much "natural selection" we can really make in a country where most people are winter feeding cows around 200 days in my part of the world. If we really go with natural selection #1 is not fertility but survival. When we have bills to pay we need a calf every year - nature doesn't hence a lot of the deer don't rear young every year. But in our domesticated situation if the cows all get equal feed and anything that is lean is allowed to stay lean and come up open versus the herd where the leaner animals get fed a little extra feed because that is cheaper than having extra culls I guess that is natural selection. I'll admit we feed extra to some leaner cows although we have set the rule that any mature cow (over 2nd calver) that requires extra feeding 2 winters running will be eliminated from the purebred herd along with any offspring.
Grassfarmer said:Thanks, that was very a interesting post Dylan. My next question is how does this relate to the quality of beef each type can yield? Is it possible to get decent quality carcasses off cattle with the internally stored fat? I'm guessing none of this type will marble and likely will have limited external fat.