Some numbers that I have been thinking about:
Although the productivity of soils varies around the province there will be a correlation between how much grain could be grown on a given acre and how much grass could be grown on the same acre of land. In the dark brown soil zone it will take 10 - 15 acres to keep one cow year round. Your land may carry more or fewer cows. However let’s assume 12 acres per cow; that will pasture her and her calf all summer and provide hay for winter feeding. Basically keep your cow with feed in front of her all year.
And although grain prices are up and down for figuring lets say that the same land in the dark brown soil zone can generate $40 cash per acre more than the cash cost of putting in the crop and taking the crop off. Cash revenues minus direct cash expenses. I call that contribution or contribution margin. The amount of money that is available to pay the fixed costs like taxes and living.
I have calculated the cash costs of keeping one cow for one year at about $300. That does not include any feed or pasture, for this example the farm provides all that. The farm bales its own winter feed and so on. The numbers I used are below (hopefully they will be readable and not jumbled):
Variable Expenses Cows Per Cow 200 Cow Herd
Salt and Minerals 12 2400
Diesel 55 11000
Gas 35 7000
Bulls 40 8000
Equipment Repairs 40 8000
Fence Repairs 30 6000
Hay and Pasture Insurance 15 3000
Grass Seed 15 3000
Trucking 10 2000
Veterinary Services 10 2000
Auction Commission 10 2000
Ivomec Pour On 5 1000
CattleMaster 4 VL5 5 1000
Twine 5 1000
Ear Tags 3 600
Scour Guard Vaccine One Dose 3 600
Checkoff 3 600
Implant 1 200
Brand Inspection 1 200
8 Way 0.50 100
Total Variable Costs 298.50
58700
If the cash cost of keeping a cow is about $300 (you may agree or disagree) and your land could generate $40 per acre contribution margin from grain than assuming your cows take 12 acres to keep them a year what would 550 pound calf prices have to be to equal your return from grain. Assuming the risk was equal which it is not but just for discussion’s sake.
I assumed a 15% inefficiency per cow, that is some dead calves, some open cows. Prices for a weaned calf would have to be $1.65. That would provide a revenue of $770 per cow and a contribution (revenue minus cash expenses) of $40 per acre.
550 pound calves have been bringing about $1.00 per pound the last few weeks. Which explains the grass acres we all see being broke. At $1.00 per pound for a 550 pound calf that cow is only generating $14 per acre contribution. That will not pay many bills.
It sure seems like if you have land that can grow grain but is in grass that maybe that land has to grow grain instead. And maybe the cows have to eat chaff and straw next winter and pasture only the roughest land next summer. Bottom line is ethanol has changed the profitability of growing grain versus growing grass and that has to be reflected in the acres in remaining in grass and ultimately the size of the Canadian cow herd. Comments?
Although the productivity of soils varies around the province there will be a correlation between how much grain could be grown on a given acre and how much grass could be grown on the same acre of land. In the dark brown soil zone it will take 10 - 15 acres to keep one cow year round. Your land may carry more or fewer cows. However let’s assume 12 acres per cow; that will pasture her and her calf all summer and provide hay for winter feeding. Basically keep your cow with feed in front of her all year.
And although grain prices are up and down for figuring lets say that the same land in the dark brown soil zone can generate $40 cash per acre more than the cash cost of putting in the crop and taking the crop off. Cash revenues minus direct cash expenses. I call that contribution or contribution margin. The amount of money that is available to pay the fixed costs like taxes and living.
I have calculated the cash costs of keeping one cow for one year at about $300. That does not include any feed or pasture, for this example the farm provides all that. The farm bales its own winter feed and so on. The numbers I used are below (hopefully they will be readable and not jumbled):
Variable Expenses Cows Per Cow 200 Cow Herd
Salt and Minerals 12 2400
Diesel 55 11000
Gas 35 7000
Bulls 40 8000
Equipment Repairs 40 8000
Fence Repairs 30 6000
Hay and Pasture Insurance 15 3000
Grass Seed 15 3000
Trucking 10 2000
Veterinary Services 10 2000
Auction Commission 10 2000
Ivomec Pour On 5 1000
CattleMaster 4 VL5 5 1000
Twine 5 1000
Ear Tags 3 600
Scour Guard Vaccine One Dose 3 600
Checkoff 3 600
Implant 1 200
Brand Inspection 1 200
8 Way 0.50 100
Total Variable Costs 298.50
58700
If the cash cost of keeping a cow is about $300 (you may agree or disagree) and your land could generate $40 per acre contribution margin from grain than assuming your cows take 12 acres to keep them a year what would 550 pound calf prices have to be to equal your return from grain. Assuming the risk was equal which it is not but just for discussion’s sake.
I assumed a 15% inefficiency per cow, that is some dead calves, some open cows. Prices for a weaned calf would have to be $1.65. That would provide a revenue of $770 per cow and a contribution (revenue minus cash expenses) of $40 per acre.
550 pound calves have been bringing about $1.00 per pound the last few weeks. Which explains the grass acres we all see being broke. At $1.00 per pound for a 550 pound calf that cow is only generating $14 per acre contribution. That will not pay many bills.
It sure seems like if you have land that can grow grain but is in grass that maybe that land has to grow grain instead. And maybe the cows have to eat chaff and straw next winter and pasture only the roughest land next summer. Bottom line is ethanol has changed the profitability of growing grain versus growing grass and that has to be reflected in the acres in remaining in grass and ultimately the size of the Canadian cow herd. Comments?
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