Just gotta toss out some thoughts here.
Here's the setup.....We background calves. Have done so for thirty plus years. In the past few years, in general, the Angus influence has grown in the cattle population in general.
That being said, I have the following observations to make.
Under an identical management system, over the same past few years we are seeing a drop in weight gain on the average of about a quarter of a pound a day measured over a fairly large number of calves, not just a small batch. This has been consistent for the past four or five years. We always had a 2.4 to 2.5 pound gain on the exotics, while now it's closer to 1.9 to 2.1 on the more Angus groups. The feed consumption has not changed. They eat the same amount of feed, and we've got weigh scale tickets to prove that. We buy prepared pellets, so there's no fooling ourselves on the feed costs.
We are also finding a larger spread in the gain on individual calves. We buy them in within 20 to 30 pounds in weight, and after 150 days, as of this morning when we weighed them, the spread was 300 pounds from the best to the poorest. Inconsistency is rampant.
Toss in the crackpots who smashed their faces into gates on the way out of the scale, the one who actually climbed the side and jumped out over the top, and the ones who came back to attack, and I must say my liking for the Angus breed is not very high this afternoon.
I just can't get why these cattle are so popular.
At least they don't have horns.....
Here's the setup.....We background calves. Have done so for thirty plus years. In the past few years, in general, the Angus influence has grown in the cattle population in general.
That being said, I have the following observations to make.
Under an identical management system, over the same past few years we are seeing a drop in weight gain on the average of about a quarter of a pound a day measured over a fairly large number of calves, not just a small batch. This has been consistent for the past four or five years. We always had a 2.4 to 2.5 pound gain on the exotics, while now it's closer to 1.9 to 2.1 on the more Angus groups. The feed consumption has not changed. They eat the same amount of feed, and we've got weigh scale tickets to prove that. We buy prepared pellets, so there's no fooling ourselves on the feed costs.
We are also finding a larger spread in the gain on individual calves. We buy them in within 20 to 30 pounds in weight, and after 150 days, as of this morning when we weighed them, the spread was 300 pounds from the best to the poorest. Inconsistency is rampant.
Toss in the crackpots who smashed their faces into gates on the way out of the scale, the one who actually climbed the side and jumped out over the top, and the ones who came back to attack, and I must say my liking for the Angus breed is not very high this afternoon.
I just can't get why these cattle are so popular.
At least they don't have horns.....
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