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    #16
    Originally posted by grassfarmer View Post
    I think that's your "last calved" on green grass affect Woodland rather than any positive effect of handling at day old.

    Working on these projects gets old perfecho - I had one older cow to bring in this year with one dry quarter and the other three welded shut - no way a calf could ever have started on them. Thankfully we get very, very few issues like these.

    A further thought on your observation Sean - won't your purebreds have less heterosis by definition than your commercials? I wonder if that accounts for the more trouble/poorer survival versus handling them?
    A lot of our commercials are straightbred AN. We were selling a lot of F1 heifers prior to our latest expansion. They are all bred the same, fed the same and handled the same, with about the same amount of outcrossing. We don't have issues with calves that are a few hours old/day old so much, other than trying to catch them. If we happen to tag/weigh a calf that is still wet, it seems to mess life up. I don't think I can replace birthweights with DNA testing just yet.

    Forgot to mention why I like May. The only real wrecks I have ever had calving cows were in February (purchased heifers) and April. I pretty much strongly dislike the month of April (at least the first 25 days) for calving cows.

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      #17
      Yeah, I never tag a calf until it's suckled for sure as I know that can mess up the process. I still need to catch them on day one or you can't catch them after that - heifer's calves are slower for a couple of days.

      On the weighing thing why bother? I've finally quit weighing bull calves this year as it really was meaningless. We know we don't have calving trouble genetics in our gene pool so really I'm weighing bulls to satisfy customer curiosity - I know the cattle and the genetics - they don't. How can people unfamiliar with my herd judge whether a 70lb calf out of a heifer or a 92lb calf out of a cow will produce smaller birthweights given that they are out of the same gene pool? Maybe more of an issue with the mainstream purebred guys where most are outcrossing to widely varying genetics. I wonder how many purebred guys accurately report birthweights anyway? I'm to the point it's got to be built on trust - if guys don't trust what I'm selling they can go bull shop elsewhere.

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        #18
        Originally posted by grassfarmer View Post
        Yeah, I never tag a calf until it's suckled for sure as I know that can mess up the process. I still need to catch them on day one or you can't catch them after that - heifer's calves are slower for a couple of days.

        On the weighing thing why bother? I've finally quit weighing bull calves this year as it really was meaningless. We know we don't have calving trouble genetics in our gene pool so really I'm weighing bulls to satisfy customer curiosity - I know the cattle and the genetics - they don't. How can people unfamiliar with my herd judge whether a 70lb calf out of a heifer or a 92lb calf out of a cow will produce smaller birthweights given that they are out of the same gene pool? Maybe more of an issue with the mainstream purebred guys where most are outcrossing to widely varying genetics. I wonder how many purebred guys accurately report birthweights anyway? I'm to the point it's got to be built on trust - if guys don't trust what I'm selling they can go bull shop elsewhere.
        Guys want to know birth weights whether they mean much or not. I bought a bull a couple years ago, seller had him at 72lbs birth weight and used a star rating for calving ease in the sale catalogue. This bull was a "3 star heifer bull", I checked the dam to make sure it wasn't a heifer so thought all was good. When I got the papers turned out he was a 72lbs twin but that little detail wasn't in the catalogue. Needless to say he hasn't been used on heifers again. Moral of the story, more info the better.

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          #19
          Originally posted by grassfarmer View Post
          I think that's your "last calved" on green grass affect Woodland rather than any positive effect of handling at day old.
          They calve at home in a 20 acre field just like all the others. The only difference is there’s the special (old, lame, twins, etc..) pairs with them instead. I can’t chalk the difference up to anything else.

          Comment


            #20
            Grassfarmer nice cage. We added a mangate to ours so you can catch an animal in the field for treatment or pulling bulls and load them on the trailer or into a squeeze. If someone is by themselves you throw the cage and squeeze on the wagon and bring the cow home in a squeeze. Definitely raise a few eyebrows on the way home from the neighbors. Works great though.



            After 30 years a few patches have been required 😉

            Comment


              #21
              Originally posted by GDR View Post
              Guys want to know birth weights whether they mean much or not. I bought a bull a couple years ago, seller had him at 72lbs birth weight and used a star rating for calving ease in the sale catalogue. This bull was a "3 star heifer bull", I checked the dam to make sure it wasn't a heifer so thought all was good. When I got the papers turned out he was a 72lbs twin but that little detail wasn't in the catalogue. Needless to say he hasn't been used on heifers again. Moral of the story, more info the better.
              I think you are drawing the wrong conclusion from the experience - you need to deal with someone you can trust to have your best interests at heart, not more un-verified information from someone you can't necessarily trust.

              Comment


                #22
                A lot of folks tape or estimate calf weights, both corral and grass calvers. I am not that smart. We weigh, but we also 50K DNA all the purebred calves. By the time they are for sale they have a set of EPD with the same accuracy as if they had sired 15-20 calves, and have both sire and dam confirmed, so I actually trust that value quite a bit. I agree about the trust thing.

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                  #23
                  I missed this thread till now.

                  I start out with the best of intentions, and I go out every few days and catch and tag 20 or 30 calves ring, dehorn as required, check for navels etc. Then seeding starts, and tagging loses priority until about now, they are much more fun to catch at a month old, night works best.

                  I've been mauled a few times, usually by the friendly cow who I least expected, and wasn't prepared for, so let my guard down. A couple of times by really nasty cows. Once by two cows at once, knocked the wind out of me after they got me down. One particularly mean cow pushed me right through a tight 5 wire fence, I was much braver once I was on the other side.

                  I have full respect for how fast they can move, and how hard they can hit. Just watch a really mad cow who is afraid of me, as she takes out her wrath on the cow beside her, wow I am glad that wasn't me. If I can bluff them, then they get to stay for another year. You learn fast not to show fear, and to sound as mean as possible, if that doesn't work, it is likely too late for the stick. I always drag the calf to a fence or feeder etc. so I can sit with my back to a wall so the cow can't get behind me and out of sight, never a corner though. I don't sit down on the calf until I am certain me and the mother have come to an amicable agreement.

                  I used to think being on the quad made me invincible, until 2 years ago, a new cow to the herd T-boned the trike (Quad was broke down) flipped it over, sent me flying, and fortunately got her foot caught in the racks slowing her down enough for me to get up and away.

                  Most of our herd are absolute pets and have no issues at all, many will come and lick me while tagging, but it only takes one to keep from trusting any of them.

                  Comment


                    #24
                    I'd never make a cowboy. I wrote this piece a few years ago after a near wreck while trying to rope calves after I'd gone down on the job for a month or more.

                    Wishin'

                    I'm an eastern boy with western dreams
                    but somehow in spite of all my schemes
                    I flog this Ontario farm.

                    I stumbled on this ranching site
                    and read the threads with great delight
                    and learned of tie or dally.

                    My little herd would soon get lost
                    if on those western plains were tossed
                    and scattered o’er those hills.

                    But they don't go far for feed and forage
                    one half mile at most from storage
                    and seldom out of sight.

                    A "roundup” is just a few minutes work
                    the quad starts up and their ears all perk
                    for they know that means fresh grass.

                    The art of roping to me is Greek
                    mostly unneeded so to speak;
                    you don't need to rope baby bovines

                    unless you're slack and miss a few
                    tags and bags right when they're new.
                    And slack is what I was.

                    So what to do with month old calves
                    with no corral and not by halves
                    do the little doggies run.

                    They sleep too light and I'm too slow
                    to grab them when their eyelids show
                    and ropin's not my trade.

                    But I drove to town to peruse a rope
                    a thirty? a fifty foot? I grab and grope
                    and settle on the shorter one.

                    But then there's nylon or leather -
                    they're awful thin and light as a feather
                    one slide and it'll burn my hands.

                    These ropin' gloves should do the trick
                    but man they don't seem very thick
                    so I leave them there.
                    This rope seems stiff, don't have much flex
                    and how do I get it over their necks
                    when I can't even hold it open in a loop.

                    I'm an eastern boy with western dreams
                    but somehow in spite of all my schemes
                    I can't rope on this Ontario farm.

                    But I head on back to catch a calf
                    my family tries hard not to laugh
                    as I coil my nylon line.

                    Some ride a bay and others a dun
                    but my ride ain't near as much fun
                    it's called a Honda.

                    It has no horn, electric or saddle
                    the muffler's shot, it makes a rattle
                    there's no sneakin' up on 'em.

                    So I park my ride and by the water trough
                    stands a momma cow and sure enough
                    her untagged baby boy beside her.

                    He's a strappin' chunk as hard as nails
                    the kind of calf where nothin' ails
                    and I really have to wonder

                    if a man my age should even try
                    to rope this muscular month old guy
                    and would a catch be "lucky?

                    But the momma moves and he's in the clear
                    so I shoot the rope out over his ear
                    and the battle's on.

                    My "lucky" shot has nailed him fair
                    he don't just run, he takes to air
                    I believe I've caught a demon!

                    The BELLAR! The BAWL! The TWIST! The BUCK!
                    Surviving this will be pure luck
                    as I work him toward my ride.

                    His wind cuts off and he drops like a rock
                    I'm scared and almost froze by shock -
                    what if I kill the beggar?

                    Nowhere to dally so I have to tie
                    grab a piggin' string and before he die
                    he's hobbled and slacken the rope.

                    He catches wind and works them hobbles
                    the four-wheeler holds but surely bobbles
                    and he never stops that bawl.

                    Well the mommas know that bawl means trouble
                    they all come chargin' in on the double
                    and add their moos to chorus.

                    But the ears get pierced and the ring fits tight
                    and the angry calf with a bit less fight
                    leaves shackles and rope behind.

                    One down and, oh, ‘bout a dozen to go
                    should I dive right in or take it slow
                    well I'm lucky so why wait.

                    I'm an eastern boy with western dreams
                    but somehow in spite of all my schemes
                    I ride a Honda not a horse.

                    So I coil my rope and set up to throw left,
                    right hand on throttle I'm not too deft
                    if a calf comes in my range.

                    Natcherly the first one comes up on the right
                    I toss with my left and what a stupid plight
                    as I rope my right front tire.

                    Cuz my coils are pinned tween knee and tank
                    I never thought to leave some lank
                    how do I hold the extra?

                    Cowboys are gennelmen but I think they'd smile
                    In fact, they'd maybe laugh a while
                    at the spectacle I made…

                    Well a lot of tries and I rope another
                    two down then three, can I catch his brother
                    I'd never make a cowboy.

                    Because the calf I'd picked was behind a thistle
                    and when I rolled the loop and let it whistle
                    I roped the spiny prickle.

                    So I yanked that cactus back.

                    Then I pick one more and make my try
                    set a wide loop and let'er fly
                    toward the calf and momma.

                    Mighta bin the hand of God or beginners luck
                    that the loop stayed empty and never struck
                    cuz I almost roped the momma.

                    I coiled it back and wiped my brow
                    If I'da caught her I be learnin' now
                    Why you don't tie off, just dally.

                    That's enough for today.

                    I'm an eastern boy with western dreams
                    but somehow in spite of all my schemes
                    I flog this Ontario farm

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