Just finished second year of calving out 25 first calf heifers that was subject to my own research and development program. Thought I would share this with some other beef producers.The success rate has been over whelming for the last two years out of 25 head per year I have only had to assist with 3 head, 2 backwards
1 front leg turned back
For years my dad has been monitoring and keeping records on gestation times so I have been selecting heifers from the short term cows and breeding with good red angus heifer bulls. The average gestation time for most of his cow herd was 283 days on 200 head. The short term gestation average time for the ones I was interested in keeping replacements for my herd was 275 days. With some as low 273 to a high of 280 days.
The shorter gestation time has yeilded heathly calves that are averaging 75 lb birthweight that gain the same as 85 to 90 lb birthweight . Seems once they are out of womb with no calving problems or serious pulls they catch up to the higher birth calves. The same bull was used in both years to give me a baseline for the sire side of the equation ( bull bw 82lbs.). I realize feed and weather can be a factor but both years were relativity the same for feed quality and the winters were about the same.
I was just wondering if anybody else has already tried this and how their results were or was my just a run of good luck.
1 front leg turned back
For years my dad has been monitoring and keeping records on gestation times so I have been selecting heifers from the short term cows and breeding with good red angus heifer bulls. The average gestation time for most of his cow herd was 283 days on 200 head. The short term gestation average time for the ones I was interested in keeping replacements for my herd was 275 days. With some as low 273 to a high of 280 days.
The shorter gestation time has yeilded heathly calves that are averaging 75 lb birthweight that gain the same as 85 to 90 lb birthweight . Seems once they are out of womb with no calving problems or serious pulls they catch up to the higher birth calves. The same bull was used in both years to give me a baseline for the sire side of the equation ( bull bw 82lbs.). I realize feed and weather can be a factor but both years were relativity the same for feed quality and the winters were about the same.
I was just wondering if anybody else has already tried this and how their results were or was my just a run of good luck.
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