fbpx
angus calf

Calving great expectations

Checking heifers Monday night, I wondered how deep I’ll have to cull–at least five of these 25 won’t get to graze the cool-season pastures that show no recovery from August. More of the mature cows on hay and native grass will have to go, too, unless the drought breaks soon. Our herd will be fewer, but better.

Rise and shine in our herd please!

Returning to the corral at dawn yesterday, I found the first calf of the year trying to rise for breakfast, a heifer out of stub-eared 352, herself a first calf in 2011. But with milder weather, little Miss will get to keep her ears intact. She’s a third generation of stacked, high-accuracy Angus genetics from AI.

They say phenotype tells us what cattle seem to be, pedigree tells us what they should be and progeny tells us what they are. We have one more metric these days, so I check her grandma’s GeneMax™ Score and confirm it is way up there at 95, with both components of marbling and gain maxed out at 5. Related steer data backs that up, so throwing in the tendency to calve early to an AI sire, I’m convinced this is a prepotent cow family.

By noon, the rest of the heifers are helping the calf along, and this morning she was joined by a half-sister… well a little closer kin, since they share not only a common sire but a great-great grandma as well. Calves are our future.

New calf on the block, and everybody wants to help. At least till they get their own…

Though we must cull another 15% to 20%, we’ll build on the base that can gain and grade best, to make increasingly expensive beef increasingly worth the money for consumers.

May all of our calving seasons continue to go so well—especially as the ladies find shelter from the rains that must surely come.

Till then, let’s keep targeting the brand and buidling tomorrow together.

–Steve

You may also like

Raised with Respect™ Cattle Care Campaign Launched This Fall

Raised with Respect™ Cattle Care Campaign Launched This Fall

Raised with Respect™ was developed as part of a strategic cattle care partnership between Sysco and CAB. The collaboration focuses on supporting farmers and ranchers, equipping them with continuing education to stay current on best management practices and helping to increase consumer confidence in beef production.

Everything They Have

Everything They Have

Progress is a necessity on the Guide Rock, Nebraska, ranch where Troy Anderson manages a commercial Angus herd, small grower yard, his 10-year-old son, and a testing environment. Troy’s approach includes respect for his livestock, people and land. For that, Anderson Cattle was honored with the CAB 2023 Commercial Commitment to Excellence Award.

Making It Better

Making It Better

Most sane folks don’t choose to go into business with Mother Nature. She’s a fickle and unpredictable partner. So, how did two people with zero agricultural background, no generational land, wealth or genetics carve a profitable partnership with her in Southwest Kansas? By focusing on progress and a desire to leave things better than they found them – which also earned them the CAB Sustainability Award.