Attention Shorty Guru's Ready Go

Help Support Steer Planet:

uluru

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 18, 2007
Messages
541
Location
Oakville, ON. Canada
What can anyone tell me about "Ready Go" born in 1974?
REG both on ASA and CSA files.
Sired by Weston Shamrock out of Mayflower Gal who is a daughter of TPS Coronet Galaxy 10th.

I see he has been used by a few breeders in Western Canada recently.
Looks like a calving ease sire based on EPD's albeit, the numbers look suspect as with most CDN animals EPD's
unless they are double registered with both the CSA and ASA.

Semen ???

JIT??????

Bob
 

justintime

Well-known member
Joined
May 26, 2007
Messages
4,346
Location
Saskatchewan Canada
I purchased Ready Go in 1977 at the American Polled Congress , in Lousiville, KY, for a then record price of $5200. He was bred in the Martin Nold herd ( Weston), Gettysburg, SD and I purchased him from Bill Marston, from Minnesota. Bill later moved to SD and raised some pretty good Angus cattle on the ranch his wife was raised on. Bill was killed in a car accident several years ago now.

Ready Go x was a deep cherry red color, and homozygous polled. He was quite moderate in frame at the time, but still weighed over 2400-2450, even when being used hard. He was one of the first bulls I ever saw that always came in  from pasture in better shape than when he went out. He was quite unique as he would breed a cow once and never look at her again. He just about drove me crazy, as there would be cows in heat, and he would be at the far end of the pasture in the shade. I had to learn that he knew what he was doing and that was a big reason that he maintained his condition so well. Ready Go had great feet, however, he was often criticized for having too much set to his rear legs... and he did. He was the bull that proved to me that this was not a problem that would ever result in him having to be shipped to market. He was still being used in Colorado at 14 years of age, the last time I heard of him. He had lots of volume, and was thick. His daughters were excellent brood cows. He could put a great udder on the poorest uddered cow's daughters. I never saw a poor uddered  or poor milking Ready Go daughter. We followed Ready Go with Highfield Irish Mist that we imported from Ireland, and Waukaru Cinnabar, who was the reserve World Champion bull. The Ready Go daughters made these bulls job very easy, as they always had great calves.

Before we had any calves from Ready Go we had sold almost $10,000 of semen in Canada and the US. A South African breeder toured many herds in the US and Canada, and he selected Ready Go as the bull he would use in his herd. We shipped 500 straws of semen to South Africa and it was a real adventure getting the money out of that country. South Africa had a law at the time that only allowed a citizen to take $2000 out of the country at any time. The buyer got around this by having his wife take $2000 out when she was travelling to New Zealand. A mistress from England sent another $2000 after she visited him in South Afirca, and yet another girl friend in San Fransisco, sent another $2000. Over a period of just over 12 months, we finally got paid the balance owing, most of which was brought out of the country by people that were visiting him in South Africa.
We also sold another 800 straws to Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay, and a semen company was supposed to be handling this for us. They delivered the semen but never got paid for it, and came home with nothing. They did not charge us for collecting this semen and agreed to collect the bull free of charge for us. Ready Go was an amazing semen producer, and for many years, he was used as a benchmark at the stud, to compare other bulls semen quality too. He had large well formed testicles and his sons did as well.

Even though it has been 32 years since I purchased Ready Go, I still sell semen every year from him. He is a calving ease sire, and some breeders still breed their heifers to him every year. Several of his calves have been shown in recent years, and have been quite competitive. If you go back into many of the best Western Canadian Shorthorn bloodlines, you usually find Ready Go some place, and sometimes many times. Many of Alta Cedar's winning cattle have Ready Go back several generations and sometimes there are 5 or 6 crosses of him. Saskvalley Pioneer 126P goes back 7 times to Ready Go, most of it is back 6 or 7 generations or more now. There are many more cattle with him in the background.

Ready Go was used here for 5 years and a visitor from Colorado was so taken with him on pasture that he offered us $6000 for him as an 8 year old bull. Since we had several hundred doses of semen left we agreed to sell him. A few years later this man dispersed and Ready Go sold to a commercial herd as an 11 year old bull. Th last I heard was that he was still breeding cows at 14 years of age.
 

ATOZ

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 20, 2007
Messages
231
WOW !!!! Breeders like Justintime are the reason I read Steerplanet !!
 

uluru

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 18, 2007
Messages
541
Location
Oakville, ON. Canada
Thanks Grant

What a great story
i will talk to you more about him when I am out your way on the 20th of this month
I knew that you were connected with him in some way but I didn't realize you actually owned him.

Many thanks again for helping me on this little research project that I am doing on some of the older sires.

..........Bob
 

justintime

Well-known member
Joined
May 26, 2007
Messages
4,346
Location
Saskatchewan Canada
Bob... I forgot to mention that I still have about 100 vials of semen. I priced him at $35 / vial in 1973, and I have never changed it. Still sells at that price.  I find it interesting that many of the semen sires in the early 70s were priced at $30-45 per dose. Now it seems that breeders think that is an outrageous price for semen. I personally think that if you are not willing to pay for genetics, you better find a good bull to turn out. I do not think $35-50 per dose is very much to pay for the chance of producing a premium priced calf.  Back in the 70s, it was possible to pay for a herd sire from semen sires long before his first calves arrived. I did this with many herd sires. I could not do it now, unless I was selling semen world wide. I believe that in Canada, in particular, there was more semen used then than there is now, by a wide margin. I used to AI at least 100 cows a year, now I am lucky to breed 5-10, other than donors that are being flushed. It is certainly different times.
 

justintime

Well-known member
Joined
May 26, 2007
Messages
4,346
Location
Saskatchewan Canada
Here is a pic of Ready Go taken shortly after arriving here from the 1977 Polled Congress in Louisville. He went directly to stud where this picture was taken. Here were his stats after a 2100 miles trip.

height at shoulder  60 inches
weight 2310
width over back 27 inches
length of head  27 inches
length of body  105 inches
length of rump  27 inches
heart girth   27 inches

Two years later he returned to the same stud to be collected again. He was right off breeding pasture and he weighed 2460 lbs on arrival.

Back in that day, most bulls were measured like this when they went to stud. I don't know of any that do that now, and some don't even weigh the bulls while they are there. It is interesting in these stats that his width over back, head length and rump length were all 27 inches. It was these stats that really impressed the South American and Australian breeders and many of them told us that great breeding sires were built in exact proportions to their head length. Even today, many cattlemen in other countries ask for these measurements when they are inquiring about semen or embryos. Usually I have to go catch a cow and run a measuring tape over her, as I would not know what a good measurement was ... or wasn't. I have often wondered if they are more astute breeders... or are they just dealing with some old fables?  Makes for interesting discussions though.
 

Attachments

  • ReadyGo_web.jpg
    ReadyGo_web.jpg
    107.9 KB · Views: 182

uluru

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 18, 2007
Messages
541
Location
Oakville, ON. Canada
I was successful in purchasing a Ready Go daughter yesterday from the Matlock sale
 

Attachments

  • Matlock Lisa 2W.jpg
    Matlock Lisa 2W.jpg
    68.5 KB · Views: 204

justintime

Well-known member
Joined
May 26, 2007
Messages
4,346
Location
Saskatchewan Canada
Congrats Bob... She looks like a good heifer. She is very typical of Ready Go daughters. Even though he was born 35 years ago, his daughters are excellent cows. He also could clean up the worst udder in one generation and his daughters milk very well. I wish I had some exportable semen as he is a calving ease sire, and he is also homozygous polled and removes all spots from his offspring. His calves are either red or dark roans with no white markings.
 
Top