I think running pairs on a high managment system that involves using high cost land, feeding over the winter using feed that can also be high cost and straining the resources of that land to carry the absolute most pairs possible is eventually a doubtful competitive proposition.
I was recently looking at a ranch on the internet in the Cypress Hills of south Saskatchewan where because of the Chinooks and open terrain, the average feeding days in winter is 10 days. I don't know how a feeding program structured in Central or Northern Alberta can hope to compete with that or with pairs produced in the southern hemisphere.
I think central and northern Alberta are more suited to feeding calves, backgrounding and grassing yearlings. That's where you get the bigger bang for the buck anyways and you can use your grainland more effectively and be better rewarded for your management skills.
grassfarmer, I think you read Allan Nation. In one of his books he points out that the most profitable form of ranching is low cost, low management, low input, extensive ranches where the pairs are basically turned loose on a large pasture. In a high managment system ranchers are better off with yearlings so that they get directly rewarded for their management skills in running an intensive pasture well.
Just my thoughts.
kpb
I was recently looking at a ranch on the internet in the Cypress Hills of south Saskatchewan where because of the Chinooks and open terrain, the average feeding days in winter is 10 days. I don't know how a feeding program structured in Central or Northern Alberta can hope to compete with that or with pairs produced in the southern hemisphere.
I think central and northern Alberta are more suited to feeding calves, backgrounding and grassing yearlings. That's where you get the bigger bang for the buck anyways and you can use your grainland more effectively and be better rewarded for your management skills.
grassfarmer, I think you read Allan Nation. In one of his books he points out that the most profitable form of ranching is low cost, low management, low input, extensive ranches where the pairs are basically turned loose on a large pasture. In a high managment system ranchers are better off with yearlings so that they get directly rewarded for their management skills in running an intensive pasture well.
Just my thoughts.
kpb
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