In the last article of the Cattleman they had an article on yardage costs and how high they can be? In fact in the article they had the cost for yardage per cow at $132 with the feed/bedding costs at $168. These were for herds of 300 head of cows.
Real quick:
Fuel $13.22
Mach. repair $12.07
Building repair $ 4.34
Utilities $16.05
custom work $11.63
paid labor $11.63
unpaid labor $41.59
taxes/misc. $ 4.13
depreciation $15.78
lease payments $ 2.63
TOTAL $132.81
Now I might question some of these costs but I assume they are pretty much in the ball park? I wonder how anyone here would stack up against these figures?
Incidently the 17 herds in the study had an income per cow of $556.80 with a total cost of production(including feed, pasture,vet,breeding,operating and capital interest) coming to $553.14! So a profit of $3.66/cow for 2004! Which is pretty decent considering it was a BSE year?
I will note that on the cow income side there was $80.19 in government payments so I guess without that the profit would be a substantial loss?
Today we have a better calf price but our replacement price is still pricey...in other words we don't get enough for the cull cows and bulls in relation to what it will cost to replace them. I suspect replacement prices will actually rise quite dramatically this year?
There are a whole lot of ways you can reduce your costs. Yardage costs are too high in most cases.
Real quick:
Fuel $13.22
Mach. repair $12.07
Building repair $ 4.34
Utilities $16.05
custom work $11.63
paid labor $11.63
unpaid labor $41.59
taxes/misc. $ 4.13
depreciation $15.78
lease payments $ 2.63
TOTAL $132.81
Now I might question some of these costs but I assume they are pretty much in the ball park? I wonder how anyone here would stack up against these figures?
Incidently the 17 herds in the study had an income per cow of $556.80 with a total cost of production(including feed, pasture,vet,breeding,operating and capital interest) coming to $553.14! So a profit of $3.66/cow for 2004! Which is pretty decent considering it was a BSE year?
I will note that on the cow income side there was $80.19 in government payments so I guess without that the profit would be a substantial loss?
Today we have a better calf price but our replacement price is still pricey...in other words we don't get enough for the cull cows and bulls in relation to what it will cost to replace them. I suspect replacement prices will actually rise quite dramatically this year?
There are a whole lot of ways you can reduce your costs. Yardage costs are too high in most cases.
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