Sold a good portion of my yearlings last week. Heifers weighed in at 976 lbs. at 88 cents. for a grand total of $858 and change each.(no sales costs taken off)
Now last fall I sold their brothers for $1.12 at 680 lbs. for at total of $762.
I always figure the heifers average around 40 lbs. lighter as calves and 15 cents less so lets say in the fall they were worth 640 X .97 = $621?
My costs: Very subjective but heres how I see it. 14 lbs/day of hay for 166 days(left them on the mommas until Nov. 15...out on old grass May 1). Valued the hay at 3.5 cents/lb.=.49 cents a day. Probably in the neighborhood of 20 lbs. of straw per day...eat and bed? Value that at 1 cent a lb. as it was my own. Good straw, two row and chaff saver baled right behind the combine.
So a total of .69/day X 166 = $114.59 in feed. Fed in a corral with a shed,no lights, a wood fired water tank, used a pitch fork!!
Now in addition I had an interest cost on these cattle. Not because I owed any money but because I expect a return on my money! So I pegged that at 5% on $621 plus the $114.59 and it came to $36.80?
For a grand total cost to me of $735.59?
So if I pay myself nothing for labor, and I have no death loss(I didn't) and I have no vet costs(I didn't) and I pay myself absolutely nothing for risk or yardage, then I guess I made $122.47/animal!
Of course you realize that in the real world you don't get away with this sort of "liberal" figures? In the real world I actually probably lost money...but then farmers haven't been in the real world for a long time?
Now last fall I sold their brothers for $1.12 at 680 lbs. for at total of $762.
I always figure the heifers average around 40 lbs. lighter as calves and 15 cents less so lets say in the fall they were worth 640 X .97 = $621?
My costs: Very subjective but heres how I see it. 14 lbs/day of hay for 166 days(left them on the mommas until Nov. 15...out on old grass May 1). Valued the hay at 3.5 cents/lb.=.49 cents a day. Probably in the neighborhood of 20 lbs. of straw per day...eat and bed? Value that at 1 cent a lb. as it was my own. Good straw, two row and chaff saver baled right behind the combine.
So a total of .69/day X 166 = $114.59 in feed. Fed in a corral with a shed,no lights, a wood fired water tank, used a pitch fork!!
Now in addition I had an interest cost on these cattle. Not because I owed any money but because I expect a return on my money! So I pegged that at 5% on $621 plus the $114.59 and it came to $36.80?
For a grand total cost to me of $735.59?
So if I pay myself nothing for labor, and I have no death loss(I didn't) and I have no vet costs(I didn't) and I pay myself absolutely nothing for risk or yardage, then I guess I made $122.47/animal!
Of course you realize that in the real world you don't get away with this sort of "liberal" figures? In the real world I actually probably lost money...but then farmers haven't been in the real world for a long time?
Comment