I was looking at Canfax tonight and read a most remarkable figure - a recent survey of producers in Alberta showed that only 33.7% of their cows were over 7 years old. After doing some calculations I'm wondering if I've discovered the missing link in beef cow profitability.
Now because I'm new here I bought a bunch of older dispersal cows in 01,02 and 03 and have only put in 4 years of
replacement heifers. Taking out this years small number of first calvers
my previous three years heifer inputs, of similar numbers each year, have lost <7% of their numbers to attrition. Of that half were culled on performance and half for being open. So by an average age of 4 years I've dropped <7% against an industry standard of 67% attrition by age 7. I pretty much know that if we get them through their first and second calving
years with no problems they should have an easier time with calves 3-10.
How can we as an industy possibly burn out so many young cows? is it poor management, lack of feed/forage or poor genetics? With figures like these as industry standards something is amiss - how can we prevent this huge wastage of cattle and money?
Now because I'm new here I bought a bunch of older dispersal cows in 01,02 and 03 and have only put in 4 years of
replacement heifers. Taking out this years small number of first calvers
my previous three years heifer inputs, of similar numbers each year, have lost <7% of their numbers to attrition. Of that half were culled on performance and half for being open. So by an average age of 4 years I've dropped <7% against an industry standard of 67% attrition by age 7. I pretty much know that if we get them through their first and second calving
years with no problems they should have an easier time with calves 3-10.
How can we as an industy possibly burn out so many young cows? is it poor management, lack of feed/forage or poor genetics? With figures like these as industry standards something is amiss - how can we prevent this huge wastage of cattle and money?
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