THought I'd start a new thread as the G8 one is getting a bit long and off topic. Is grass finishing for everyone not at all. I can see it integrating because it does take a different set of skills right from production through marketing. I could see the evolution of "grass feedlots" areas of high quality well managed pastures near the markets where cattle could be sent to be topped up. Grass finished beef isn't taking consumption away from mainstream production but actually supplementing it by attracting people who for whatever reason have quit eating conventional beef. We do live in interesting times.
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What do you need here wilson, to be told that you are right? That you do everything just a little smarter, faster, better than everyone else? In your various postings it's sure comeing out that no matter what anyone has done you know how to do it just a little bit better, a jack of all trades and master of none. You feed out so many yearlings, you have your own pen at the local feedlot, yet you save a grassfed for your own table. You'll praise a breed of cattle in one breath and cut them to shreads in another. I don't need to go on and on, I'm not a right-fighter like you, who will scrap about anything and then decide you must be right when everyone else has simply decided to just stop listening to you complain and then go home. Thats another way you're like the cattle you raise, hot headed and always pushing through the fences, easy to keep because they continously "feed off the neighbours" (field), snort and push and bully until everyone just goes off and buys a whiteface to calm down the ferocious temper. A little like the kind of people we're dealing with to the south as well. I know you'll come back with some snappy comments to this, that's just your nature, wilson, and that whether you believe it or not, I do respect, channelled, it makes you a survivor in horrific times such as this. I for one am highly adapatable again, similar to my breed of choice and definatly do adapt based on my surroundings, price of land, consumer requests and while you refer to me as stubborn, I think stubborn refers more to your personality, I'm tenacious, quietly and persistantly rise to the top, again just like I have taken the quality of my herd to and just like I plan to try and lead our fight as country. Go ahead and sound off wilson, I know you will sure need to after this. But if you need to fight about something as useless as diversification, we all do what suits us best, it's a lost cause with me. As my grandpa used to say, "there's no use even talking to you" when you've got all the answers. I'm surprised you're not the president by now. If you need to be right wilson, you've got it! You'll have to fight with out me though, I'm not really interested in trying to "prove" whos right. I would caution you though on fighting just for the sake of fighting, some threads are starting to sound a little hypocritical.
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Excellent post on the bottom of the G8 topic cswilson, that's kind of where i'm headed. I like your idea above of having geographic areas of the country that climatically suit grass finishing but we must find a name other than "grass feedlots" or some of these new customers might run the other way!
I would also be concerned at the need to transport them to such an area if it involved long journeys. I much prefer the idea of producing, slaughtering and consuming beef in the local areas. It's better for the animals, environment,
local economy, producers pocket books and worse for the multi-nationals as it limits their access to the process and reduces their ability to steal the value out of our production chains.
There is an interesting essay available at "http://www.nehbc.org/articles.html" that perhaps,like Cam Ostercamps essay here, proved a pivital point in the grassfed movement in the US. In the eyes of the consumer it was an awakening, a realisation that they did have responsibility for the food they consume and the impact it's production has on the environment. Since it's publication the grassfed producers have been unable to meet the demand for their product.
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I believe there is a real science to this you need to know your grass genetics as well your cows. Energy levels versus protien levels at differnt stages of growth to fatten cattle that are at differnt ages. The cattle require differnt forages at certain ages to get the most gain. The biggest problem we had was fat color we get the cattle fat then put them on a barley ration for 60 days just to change the fat color. In time there might be a market for grass finished beef but this drought needs end it is hard to grow any grass on 2 inches of rain over 4 months.
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The most important thing to remember is that it is what works for you. There is no right or wrong to this. Some may not like grass fed - personally I have eaten some that I like the taste of and some I haven't. Biggest problem - up until now - with the grassfed in North America at any rate is the consistency of the product. Like all things, that is changing. When I've eaten grassfed in Australia I don't care for the taste of it, but then some of the cattle have eaten turnips. I think if there long enough one would adjust to it.
I agree with grassfarmer that the current way we are doing things is not sustainable for the long term and we do have to make changes. What those are will depend on our management philisophies, styles, available capital, long-term goals etc.
I've never made any bones about not caring for feedlots and confined feeding operations - primarily because it does not fit with my management philosophy and I am concerned about the animals themselves. It doesn't mean that I think everyone should change - just that I will never do it. For some people doing it this way works best and if they can make money at it, then so be it.
I don't believe it has to be an all or nothing proposition - do what works best for you and what you can live with. As we've watched this whole mess play out of the past year and a bit, it has demonstrated the need for change, because the way we've been doing it just hasn't been working for us in reality.
If people are willing to pay more for what they want, then all the more power to these producers for providing it to them and continued success in building and expanding these markets. Of all the things that could happen coming out of this fiasco, I think that there will be an increase in the direct marketing end of things. Find your customers, your niche and work on that. For those that want to continue to work in the tried and true system, go for it. Let's not tear each other down for trying something outside of the ordinary. Who knows, it may just work!
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cswilson, The research in the States shows that you can't make hay of a high enough quality to get cattle to marble -whether you could "top them up on it" as you say, I'm not sure. I suppose it depends if the hay was in a small enough proportion of the diet and the grass was very good.You certainly can fatten cattle reasonably well on a good grass silage but again that is the expensive, mechanical way to do it and you lose the all important Omega 3 's they get from grazing fresh green grass.
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I'm certainly not against grass finished beef cswilson, and if you have the talent it takes to get the job done, I genuinly applaud you. I so far have not had the talent it apparently takes to achieve customer satisfaction although I have no doubts that it can and is done with sucess. Also my apologies for sounding off so deeply, you're absolutly right in that I jumped to my own conclusions upon reading your post. You have my respect for the ideas you bring to the table and certainly no hard feelings for the times when we may disagree.
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I am still a little confused as to what is generally meant by grass-finished. Maybe I can learn a little here.
Does this mean grass year round? Or grass, then hay during winter? Or grass, hay, pellets, etc as required? Grassfarmer, to you grain feed 60 days like cswilson to add extra finish and change the color or fat from yellow to white?
Cswilson, you said all your test cattle graded A. Was that Quality Grade A or Yield grade A?
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