RyanChandler
Well-known member
That's the plan!
And of course they interbred, AJ. Where do you think red heads came from? (lol)
And of course they interbred, AJ. Where do you think red heads came from? (lol)
OH Breeder said:I split this topic because I like the info we are discussing.
when I graduated college many moons ago I worked in an Amish community. They did several studies to see if starting child bearing at earlier age effected life span. Information has been found both ways. Majority says the younger the female to start bearing children can shorten her adult life span. What was kind of interesting was that the older the female was when bearing their first child, IE 30 yo vs. 16 yo, actually had a positive effect on her life span.
So- If the bison wait longer to breed and live longer bearing calves, wouldn't that reduce your future replacement cost by having a female that can produce longer and is healthier vs a female that is burnt out at age 10 and you have to replace?
blackdiamond said:OH Breeder said:I split this topic because I like the info we are discussing.
when I graduated college many moons ago I worked in an Amish community. They did several studies to see if starting child bearing at earlier age effected life span. Information has been found both ways. Majority says the younger the female to start bearing children can shorten her adult life span. What was kind of interesting was that the older the female was when bearing their first child, IE 30 yo vs. 16 yo, actually had a positive effect on her life span.
So- If the bison wait longer to breed and live longer bearing calves, wouldn't that reduce your future replacement cost by having a female that can produce longer and is healthier vs a female that is burnt out at age 10 and you have to replace?
Depends on how much it cost to get there... Which is what some of us point out time after time.... yet, we get critized.
blackdiamond said:OH Breeder said:I split this topic because I like the info we are discussing.
when I graduated college many moons ago I worked in an Amish community. They did several studies to see if starting child bearing at earlier age effected life span. Information has been found both ways. Majority says the younger the female to start bearing children can shorten her adult life span. What was kind of interesting was that the older the female was when bearing their first child, IE 30 yo vs. 16 yo, actually had a positive effect on her life span.
So- If the bison wait longer to breed and live longer bearing calves, wouldn't that reduce your future replacement cost by having a female that can produce longer and is healthier vs a female that is burnt out at age 10 and you have to replace?
Depends on how much it cost to get there... Which is what some of us point out time after time.... yet, we get critized.
-XBAR- said:In terms of productive longevity as used above, is like to know what age this is w/ buffalo. Is define this point when a cows weaning weights start diminishing.
OH, the shorter lived cow could potentially be more profitable especially if many of the years the older cow lived were after her productive life as defined above. Perhaps you could have liquidated the first cow and reirnvested in a cow that brings home twice the annual cash flow as the original longer lived cow. You have to take into account opportunity cost.
OH Breeder said:blackdiamond said:OH Breeder said:I split this topic because I like the info we are discussing.
when I graduated college many moons ago I worked in an Amish community. They did several studies to see if starting child bearing at earlier age effected life span. Information has been found both ways. Majority says the younger the female to start bearing children can shorten her adult life span. What was kind of interesting was that the older the female was when bearing their first child, IE 30 yo vs. 16 yo, actually had a positive effect on her life span.
So- If the bison wait longer to breed and live longer bearing calves, wouldn't that reduce your future replacement cost by having a female that can produce longer and is healthier vs a female that is burnt out at age 10 and you have to replace?
Depends on how much it cost to get there... Which is what some of us point out time after time.... yet, we get critized.
Well- bison domestic and natural are raised on grass. Grass only. Most of the farms I have viewed only keep grass and grass stuffs available. I know there's a cost associated with the land the grass is on, but if you can produce a female on grass alone that lives to 25yo producing calves your input cost would be considerably lower than pushing a female hard and failing.
vc said:And when the "some growth and some age" I have to feel that she is big enough and old enough, and that is all the matters to me, what you deem is old enough and big enough is for you to determine. As far as the cow, 85 pound calf weaned at 500 pounds at 5 months off of pasture will work for me, maybe not you or anyone else but I'll take it.
I guess that's my point, what works for you may not work for me, it may work but my way does as well.
jaimiediamond said:vc said:And when the "some growth and some age" I have to feel that she is big enough and old enough, and that is all the matters to me, what you deem is old enough and big enough is for you to determine. As far as the cow, 85 pound calf weaned at 500 pounds at 5 months off of pasture will work for me, maybe not you or anyone else but I'll take it.
I guess that's my point, what works for you may not work for me, it may work but my way does as well.
As it is the owner or manager of the herd that determines whether the 12 year old weaning off 500lbs on grass would be considered a productive cow or not, depending on forage, weather, and cow condition. I think longevity is determined by the age at which a cow is no longer wanted in the herd due to her inability to continue as to what her owner perceives is a profitable brood cow. This view covers all aspects of cattle production, purebred, clubby, commercial as in the end everyone wants to make money not be in the red raising cattle.
-XBAR- said:jaimiediamond said:vc said:And when the "some growth and some age" I have to feel that she is big enough and old enough, and that is all the matters to me, what you deem is old enough and big enough is for you to determine. As far as the cow, 85 pound calf weaned at 500 pounds at 5 months off of pasture will work for me, maybe not you or anyone else but I'll take it.
I guess that's my point, what works for you may not work for me, it may work but my way does as well.
As it is the owner or manager of the herd that determines whether the 12 year old weaning off 500lbs on grass would be considered a productive cow or not, depending on forage, weather, and cow condition. I think longevity is determined by the age at which a cow is no longer wanted in the herd due to her inability to continue as to what her owner perceives is a profitable brood cow. This view covers all aspects of cattle production, purebred, clubby, commercial as in the end everyone wants to make money not be in the red raising cattle.
I think it should be more precise than that. A cow should only be compared to her self; to her own track record. I, along w/ every person on here, would take 500 @ 5mnths as that puts your calves (my educated guess) in the top 1% of calves in the country as far as gains go. The problem lies when this cow's calf that has always weighed 500 @ 5 now comes in at 470. And then the next year 465. And then 455. Not only are her calves becoming lighter thus her yearly profit margin less, her salvage value is decreasing as well. While this cow is still alive and able enough to conceive, I would contend she's past her production life. At this point, this cow could be replaced with a producer that can hit the 500. That is the opportunity cost. The fact that you would have to lay out the exact same amount of $ to feed these two animals yearly yet the returns on one are higher.
Yes of course. You would obviously have to take this into consideration. At this point, you could then compare her results to her 'avg' and then her contemporaries to theirs'. Think percentage change.frostback said:-XBAR- said:jaimiediamond said:vc said:And when the "some growth and some age" I have to feel that she is big enough and old enough, and that is all the matters to me, what you deem is old enough and big enough is for you to determine. As far as the cow, 85 pound calf weaned at 500 pounds at 5 months off of pasture will work for me, maybe not you or anyone else but I'll take it.
I guess that's my point, what works for you may not work for me, it may work but my way does as well.
As it is the owner or manager of the herd that determines whether the 12 year old weaning off 500lbs on grass would be considered a productive cow or not, depending on forage, weather, and cow condition. I think longevity is determined by the age at which a cow is no longer wanted in the herd due to her inability to continue as to what her owner perceives is a profitable brood cow. This view covers all aspects of cattle production, purebred, clubby, commercial as in the end everyone wants to make money not be in the red raising cattle.
I think it should be more precise than that. A cow should only be compared to her self; to her own track record. I, along w/ every person on here, would take 500 @ 5mnths as that puts your calves (my educated guess) in the top 1% of calves in the country as far as gains go. The problem lies when this cow's calf that has always weighed 500 @ 5 now comes in at 470. And then the next year 465. And then 455. Not only are her calves becoming lighter thus her yearly profit margin less, her salvage value is decreasing as well. While this cow is still alive and able enough to conceive, I would contend she's past her production life. At this point, this cow could be replaced with a producer that can hit the 500. That is the opportunity cost. The fact that you would have to lay out the exact same amount of $ to feed these two animals yearly yet the returns on one are higher.
Shouldnt the bull be a factor in weaning weight as well? The cow cant do it all.