I spend a few hours at Farmfair yesterday and came back pondering the relevance of "show" cattle to today's industry. At a time we are being bombarded with advice telling us to realise we are business and to start treating it as such where does the show ring fit in?
In my opinion an awful lot of cattle there were commercially useless. I wouldn't buy a rising two year old bull of any breed if he weighed close to, or over, 2000lbs. He wouldn't live long enough under commercial conditions to pay for himself. Some of the spring bull "calves" on show weighing 1100lbs plus were worse than the older bulls in this respect. In this era of high tech selection tools like gene mapping why do we persist with competitive showing that relies totally on one man's visual assesment of type and quality?
I know there will probably always be competition between breeders and it is right that they compare cattle. Why not use some common sense though? I read about 15 years ago that all the Simmentals shown at one of the (huge) South African shows had to be shown in a progency group if they had calved at least once. I saw some huge, first calf heifers yesterday, weaned for who knows how long, in butter fat condition weighing 1600lbs but what were their calves like back at home? Were there 400lbs among them? I think that the leading Simmental sale in North America in recent years has been the outfit that relies on South African genetics.
As a means to improve out Canadian beef industry longterm wouldn't it be an idea to rethink what we are aiming to breed - efficient beef genetics or "elephant beef" got by show judges placing the over fed monsters first regardless of production cost and market relevance?
In my opinion an awful lot of cattle there were commercially useless. I wouldn't buy a rising two year old bull of any breed if he weighed close to, or over, 2000lbs. He wouldn't live long enough under commercial conditions to pay for himself. Some of the spring bull "calves" on show weighing 1100lbs plus were worse than the older bulls in this respect. In this era of high tech selection tools like gene mapping why do we persist with competitive showing that relies totally on one man's visual assesment of type and quality?
I know there will probably always be competition between breeders and it is right that they compare cattle. Why not use some common sense though? I read about 15 years ago that all the Simmentals shown at one of the (huge) South African shows had to be shown in a progency group if they had calved at least once. I saw some huge, first calf heifers yesterday, weaned for who knows how long, in butter fat condition weighing 1600lbs but what were their calves like back at home? Were there 400lbs among them? I think that the leading Simmental sale in North America in recent years has been the outfit that relies on South African genetics.
As a means to improve out Canadian beef industry longterm wouldn't it be an idea to rethink what we are aiming to breed - efficient beef genetics or "elephant beef" got by show judges placing the over fed monsters first regardless of production cost and market relevance?
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