500-600 pound feeder steers traded for $1.00-$1.14 in Lewistown Montana last week. The Canadian dollar closed at 78 cents yesterday. That makes that 600 pound steer in Montana that is worth US$1.10 a pound worth $1.41 Canadian or $846 in our dollars. The same steer would have brought $1.10 Canadian a pound or $660 Canadian in a central Alberta auction last week. That amounts to $186 Canadian more for the U.S. steer sold in Lewistown Montana than for the steer calf born in Canada and sold in Red Deer Alberta.
There is simply no way the Canadian cow calf industry can survive any length of time if we are getting nearly $200 less for a calf than the Americans. That is truly uncompetitive. I cannot survive producing calves if I am getting $200 less than my American neighbour. Our federal government shows no appetite to do anything about COOL so I might have to do something about it myself.
So what can we do about it? I checked Google Maps and see it is 520 kms from Ponoka to the U.S. border. That is not all that far. Six hours on a cattle liner. It occurred to me that the only difference between the steer in Lewistown and the steer in Red Deer (other than it is worth about $200 more) is where it hit the ground at calving time.
It certainly looks to me like there is an opportunity, even a necessity, to haul pregnant cows to the U.S to calve, leave the cows there long enough to early wean and then bring the girls back home leaving baby behind to be born, feed and slaughtered in the United States. Sure it would cost some money to do that but if we can get $850 for a weaned calf it should pencil out. I might have to brand my cows CAN but that would only have to be done once and they could go back and forth to the U.S. to calf every year.
It is simply a value added opportunity.
There is simply no way the Canadian cow calf industry can survive any length of time if we are getting nearly $200 less for a calf than the Americans. That is truly uncompetitive. I cannot survive producing calves if I am getting $200 less than my American neighbour. Our federal government shows no appetite to do anything about COOL so I might have to do something about it myself.
So what can we do about it? I checked Google Maps and see it is 520 kms from Ponoka to the U.S. border. That is not all that far. Six hours on a cattle liner. It occurred to me that the only difference between the steer in Lewistown and the steer in Red Deer (other than it is worth about $200 more) is where it hit the ground at calving time.
It certainly looks to me like there is an opportunity, even a necessity, to haul pregnant cows to the U.S to calve, leave the cows there long enough to early wean and then bring the girls back home leaving baby behind to be born, feed and slaughtered in the United States. Sure it would cost some money to do that but if we can get $850 for a weaned calf it should pencil out. I might have to brand my cows CAN but that would only have to be done once and they could go back and forth to the U.S. to calf every year.
It is simply a value added opportunity.
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