A lot of cattle producers have got pretty good at cutting costs to the bone and squeezing every penny out of that old cow that is possible....BSE and the ten years of starvation prices, was a pretty good teacher!
For the first time in close to a decade prices are fairly decent? Will we see an expansion of the cow herd or will producers take the opportunity to grab the money and run?
I ask this because of a recent talk with a neighbor who has decided now is the time to pack it in. He told me although prices looked good, he has a funny feeling about the business.....like when is the other shoe going to drop! Maybe we're all a little leery after seeing what a thing like BSE can do to a market?
Anyway, last fall he sprayed out his hayland and his nephew direct seeded a crop into it this spring. He will be breaking up what pastures he can throughout the summer. He plans to sell one quarter that is too rough to breakup.
He tells me he is looking forward to travelling a bit in the winter and not being tied down feeding and calving....which I can certainly understand!
I suspect there are a lot of guys like him, but I wonder who will take over raising beef? If the cow herd takes a major reduction, through attrition, what will be the implications for the beef infrastructure....the feedlots, auction barns, packing houses, trucking business, etc.? Will they remain viable?
For the first time in close to a decade prices are fairly decent? Will we see an expansion of the cow herd or will producers take the opportunity to grab the money and run?
I ask this because of a recent talk with a neighbor who has decided now is the time to pack it in. He told me although prices looked good, he has a funny feeling about the business.....like when is the other shoe going to drop! Maybe we're all a little leery after seeing what a thing like BSE can do to a market?
Anyway, last fall he sprayed out his hayland and his nephew direct seeded a crop into it this spring. He will be breaking up what pastures he can throughout the summer. He plans to sell one quarter that is too rough to breakup.
He tells me he is looking forward to travelling a bit in the winter and not being tied down feeding and calving....which I can certainly understand!
I suspect there are a lot of guys like him, but I wonder who will take over raising beef? If the cow herd takes a major reduction, through attrition, what will be the implications for the beef infrastructure....the feedlots, auction barns, packing houses, trucking business, etc.? Will they remain viable?
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