How about some discussion on the Gerald Fry weekend. For those of you who could not make it; it was a wonderful event and thanks to the Wobesors for putting up with our antics and hosting the darn thing.
I'm going to start the ball rolling by bringing up a topic that I felt was most important to me. Early weaning, or the stress involved in a young calf's life that leads to underdeveloped fore rib loin or heart girth later in the calf's life.
We personally weaned a calf crop in early March of 2010 after birthing these calves in May and June of 2009. The main reason we did it was the high feed costs last winter and our decision to feed a pile of quite ripe silage rather than purchase hay at 100 plus bucks a bale.
We linear measure our bulls every year and the linear measurements were almost exactly the same 3 score average for this group over wintered on the cows as the past years group. However, our weight adjusted rib eye per hundred pounds increased substantially.
Now I would like to think that our breeding program is improving every year, but the jump in rib eye size has certainly got me wondering how much management has to do with fore loin development.
Can you imagine the number of dollars that the industry could be throwing away if these numbers are true. We personally saw over ten per cent increase in weight adjusted rib eye -- year to year on two pens of 30 Welsh Black bulls. What if it is only five percent on hundreds of thousands of calves weaned at 200 days in Canada every year?
Oh yes, I am planning on using this thread to promote not only the Gerald Fry conference, but a set of Celtic bulls that will be sold on April 9th at the Olds College....
A set of bulls that got the Igenity boys wondering what was going on when we spanked 5 out of 8 sons of one sire with 9 out of ten on the tenderness DNA marker. A top linear measured sire out of a top linear measured grand sire. HMMM. Maybe nature and selection by nature (which is what linear measurement means to me) can create some wonderful, predictable carcasses after all....
Cheers,
Randy
Come on everybody (especially purecountry) sing along
I'm going to start the ball rolling by bringing up a topic that I felt was most important to me. Early weaning, or the stress involved in a young calf's life that leads to underdeveloped fore rib loin or heart girth later in the calf's life.
We personally weaned a calf crop in early March of 2010 after birthing these calves in May and June of 2009. The main reason we did it was the high feed costs last winter and our decision to feed a pile of quite ripe silage rather than purchase hay at 100 plus bucks a bale.
We linear measure our bulls every year and the linear measurements were almost exactly the same 3 score average for this group over wintered on the cows as the past years group. However, our weight adjusted rib eye per hundred pounds increased substantially.
Now I would like to think that our breeding program is improving every year, but the jump in rib eye size has certainly got me wondering how much management has to do with fore loin development.
Can you imagine the number of dollars that the industry could be throwing away if these numbers are true. We personally saw over ten per cent increase in weight adjusted rib eye -- year to year on two pens of 30 Welsh Black bulls. What if it is only five percent on hundreds of thousands of calves weaned at 200 days in Canada every year?
Oh yes, I am planning on using this thread to promote not only the Gerald Fry conference, but a set of Celtic bulls that will be sold on April 9th at the Olds College....
A set of bulls that got the Igenity boys wondering what was going on when we spanked 5 out of 8 sons of one sire with 9 out of ten on the tenderness DNA marker. A top linear measured sire out of a top linear measured grand sire. HMMM. Maybe nature and selection by nature (which is what linear measurement means to me) can create some wonderful, predictable carcasses after all....
Cheers,
Randy
Come on everybody (especially purecountry) sing along
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