• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

How's your rain?

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #16
    Allfarmer

    Your bull ratio is very correct. 4 bulls for 120 head on range conditions.
    That should give you the insurance you need to have your heifers covered first & second cycle.

    You got them anyway so use them.

    Comment


      #17
      greybeard - If that was addressed to me sorry, I'm out
      of bulls for this year.

      Sadie - "very correct" in your opinion maybe. How do
      guys saying this explain a Longhorn? Mature bulls
      with a scrotal of 28cm, a struggle to get enough
      volume for a sample to test yet they'll breed half the
      cows in the country, the neighbours included if you
      give them a chance. At the same time lots of guys
      breed 100 heifers with the aim of getting 70 or 80 in
      calf. Good business for bull sellers suggesting 25-30
      cows per bull but poor business for the commercial
      rancher.

      Comment


        #18
        Years ago there was a guy out by Hanna that used to sell Charlais bulls at two years old that had never seen a grain pail and were just run out on the prairie. They were like 1400 or 1500 lbs. He never helped anything calve.
        They had a terrific reputation for being able to breed large numbers of cows.
        I think his name was Bill Hunt, but I may be wrong.

        Comment


          #19
          I've heard of that guy ASRG. Makes sense - that's just
          the way we rear bulls too. Too many fat slob bulls
          around that can't move and spend their days fighting
          and sitting in the shade instead of breeding cows.
          Maybe waiting for the owner to bring their lunch pail
          for them as that's how they were raised. A bull with
          30 cows or heifers to breed only has to average 1.5 a
          day if they are all cycling in the first 21 days. A bull
          that can't manage more than that is a bull in name
          only in my opinion.

          Comment


            #20
            Bulls can get hurt though, no matter how they were raised. We've got one right now that's done something major to his shoulder. However, we never overload our bulls, so there's lots of bull power left to get the job done.

            Over the years we've also had a bull hit by lightning, we've had one go visit the neighbours, and we've had one get tangled in some wire in a rented pasture. There's more involved to getting the cows bred than just having a fertile bull. He needs to be healthy and sound too.

            It's nice to have a cushion in case something goes wrong out there.

            Comment


              #21
              Usually when our bulls get hurt it is because there were multiple bulls scrapping. It is not always practical but my heifer breeding happens near to home so I can run 1 bull in up to 50 plus girls. Keep an eye on proceedings and change out as necessary. We keep 25-1 bulls around but seldom have that ratio in the field. The extra bulls get swapped out for the second cycle or in case of injury. It's not like the bulls cooperate and communicate which cows that they breed. Usually the poor girl gets multiple partners.

              Comment


                #22
                I think a lot of producers waste a lot of money on
                bulls. I pastured 70 cows the first summer I was here
                for a rancher that buys some of the top show ring
                Charolais bulls every year. He turned out 3 bulls with
                the 70 head and all 3 had to be replaced during the
                season, in fact one of the replacement 3 had to be
                replaced by one of the originals who had recovered
                by that time. One of the original 3 bulls was shipped
                due to a foot injury, a yearling bull died eventually
                and I don't know what happened to the 3
                replacements. I felt sorry for the guy and said he was
                having a run of bad luck - he didn't think so - this
                was about average performance over the years.
                Anyone care to count the cost of this type of
                scenario? That type of Charolais bull is not cheap to
                buy - probably 2.5 times the price I sell bulls for, he
                needs twice as many bulls and the cull rate is at least
                twice what mine is. Can sure burn through a lot of
                money every year doing this kind of thing.

                Comment


                  #23
                  On our range conditions we use a ratio of 1-17. Lots of years we don't see our cattle enough to solve problems as they arise. It is safer to turn out extra at the start and let Mother Nature look after any possible wrecks. This spring we were 80 calved in the first cycle.
                  Heifers are bred in a pasture at 1-30 ratio. I like having an odd number of bulls in a pasture situation as it seems 2 are usually having an argument and the third is doing the breeding.

                  Dad used to say that in a pasture situation on the prairies back in the 60's that a bull who couldn't look after 70 cows was not considered a good breeder. Not sure what the calving period length was though.

                  Comment


                    #24
                    I've learned the hard way that the poorest place to try to save money is by cutting back the bull power. Some guy's bulls might have a magic wand instead of a penis but those bulls are pretty rare.

                    One extra is way cheaper than one too few.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      Now time from a large animal vet's perspective:

                      Poor bull power during the breeding season showed up every late summer and early fall. Witnessed many sad & unhappy producers at that time of year.

                      Accidents will always happen, Broken leg, stifle, shoulder, lacerated penis, broken penis, lightning, visiting neighbors, sudden deaths.

                      The worst cases were in those herds that showed up with high percentage of opens and late pregnancies.

                      Weak breeding bulls----with testicles undersized were the most frequent.

                      Allfarmer you can check those 4 "good bulls yourself" if you haven't turned them out yet.

                      2 years olds--strive for 38cms minimum.
                      tecture of those testicles "hard and firm" not soft and spongy.

                      The scrotal circum measurement makes up 40% of the breeding score. It is a good start that a producer can do on his own to evaluate a satisfactory breeding animal.

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Did you ever semen test any longhorns Sadie?

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Yes I did. Longhorn bulls, Limousin bulls and at one time Blonde D Aquataine bulls fit into a catagory all of their own.

                          I remember on the Longhorns ---treat them like a bison. They got to be pushed up tight with a pole right behind. They are kickers.

                          Smaller measured nuts---those sometimes never got measured but fertile samples on ejaculation.

                          I posted the old data that is on all THERIOGENIOLOGY FORMS FOR SEMEN TESTING.

                          &lt;a href=&quot;http://s1138.photobucket.com/albums/n523/kphaber/?action=view&amp;amp;current=img405.jpg&quot; target=&quot;_blank&quot;&gt;<img src="http://i1138.photobucket.com/albums/n523/kphaber/img405.jpg"/>&lt;/a&gt;

                          Comment


                            #28
                            I'm sick of it!!! All it ever does is rain,and it is raining again now,and all we had to do was take the balers out of the qounset this time.

                            Comment


                              #29
                              I would gladly take a bit of rain, we are at 1 1/4" since May 1. Most of that in the last week. Oats & peas were seeded last Friday. Just enough moisture to get them started but the last 2 days of sun and wind is drying things up fast.

                              Forecast is rain on Saturday.

                              Comment


                                #30
                                We are at 3.5 in June, 6.5 since April 1st and will take
                                as much more as we can get. I think when the heat
                                sets in July/August things are going to dry up pretty
                                quick in a lot of Alberta.
                                I'm greedy when it comes to moisture, I'd rather have
                                excess than shortage every time.

                                Comment

                                • Reply to this Thread
                                • Return to Topic List
                                Working...
                                X

                                This website uses tracking tools, including cookies. We use these technologies for a variety of reasons, including to recognize new and past website users, to customize your experience, perform analytics and deliver personalized advertising on our sites, apps and newsletters and across the Internet based on your interests.
                                You agree to our and by clicking I agree.