aj
Well-known member
However I just read chap comment and there is alot of truth in what he said. You just can't stereo type people or cattle. JMO
justme said:Just seems like the answer to everything is lowlines anymore. Just my opinion.
I haven't pulled a calf in 2.5 years. One c-section but it wasn't due to size it was backwards and twisted. I am very selective on calving ease in my cows and bulls due to being here alone while husband works off the farm. BUT I don't say maines maines maines. Honestly I could breed my cows to a Jersey and get calving ease but I don't.
I just think everyone has a different purpsose in the cattle industry, and I can honestly say lowlines wouldn't work in our world here.
Juli N a/k/a common sense said:TJ, I think it would only be fair to compare apples to apples. Just curious, but if you were to study within the Lowline industry would you consider all of the lowline bulls to be calving ease bulls when you are breeding them to lowline cattle? Or are they considered calving ease when they are being bred to cattle that are double the frame score of the bull? I am not really familiar with the genetics of the lowlines or how they factor their epd's. Do they have a way to distinguish the calves registered out of lowline bulls as to weather they are out of other breeds versus lowline? I would think that would make a huge difference. For example, if you took a lowline bull and AI bred 100 head of full blood Salers cows and they all calved unassisted with 70 lb calves would that be a fair test and would that rightly affect the lowline bull's epds versus using him on 100 lowline cows that all had c-sections and 50lb calves?
I am being sincere and hope this doesn't sound wrong. I am seriously curious how the lowline breed registry keeps that straight. It would make a big difference on the true epd.
Juli
kanshow said:Gidget brings up an interesting point. If all we wanted was a cow freshener... breed them to a Jersey or some other small framed breed. However, most of us want it all.. a live calf who is either very marketable or showable. I know it's been said before but in my part of the world, the price deduction on anything smaller than around a 5 is tremendous. Sure I could change my entire program & marketing plan but that isn't feasible. We wont' even talk about showing a smaller framed calf..
simtal said:what happens when cattle that calving ease genetics bred to calving ease bulls have big calves?
Chap said:BE CAREFUL with SINGLE TRAIT SELECTION!
What happens when you continually line up low birth weight genetics? you get low birth weights, but you may also give up maternal calving ease. I have heard numerous reports form commericial men about their angus heifers being harder calving than at any time they can remember. CE epd (Calving Ease Direct) is much more important when evaluationg how a bull will actually calve out and MCE (Maternal Calving Ease - how easy a bulls daughters calve) needs to be evaluated as well, to be assured that the retained daughters aren't just low bw , but actually have the capability to have a calf.
I have a PB Simmental bull,CNS Exclusive, that is terrible on his BW epd, but his calving ease number is surprisingly high considering his recorded bw's. Calves come big (in lbs of live calf) but are born with minimal difficulty. his percentile breakdown is 5.7 CE (top 60%) 4.5 BW (bottom 5%), 77.3 YW (top 10%) and 4.5 MCE (top 20%). I can work with a bull like this, if I like his kind. In my business, light muscled, ugly ones are hard to sell, so I will give, to get some take. There are outliers in any population, if you want it all, you will have to dig deep, but can probably find something to fit most of your needs and expectations.
Jill said:Juli, that is a great post! I can't speak for anyone else, but I do know my herd. We went for 15 years never having a c-section, and rarely ever pulling a calf, last year and this year we have had 3 sections and pulled many. We are still breeding to the same bulls we have always used, (and around here I like the 80+ calves), the only change we have made was we sold many of our really big cows and have downsized the frame size to 6 and 7's. I know they may have a little higher intake, but when shooting for show calves like we do I think a little bigger framed cow is almost a must.
In response to the lowline post, a live calf is great won't agrue that, but there is no show market for them around here, there is no sale barn market for them around here, and if you keep them you end up with an even smaller frame heifer than the 6 I started out with, I don't see that as a plus from any direction. I'm not sure why every post somehow ends up a lowline post, but in most cases it would be like breeding a corgi to a great dane, you may get a small puppy, but what on earth are you going to do with it?
Great point. I know a guy near me that has a large hrdr of commercial Angus and Sim/Angus cows. He started AIing his hfrs to low bw Angus bulls. Since their calves were generally better than his herd bull sired calves he started keeping those hfrs and consequently breeding low bw genetics into his entire cow herd. Two yrs ago he told me he was averaging 65 - 70 lbs bw for his entire herd. He is now selecting herd bulls with larger bw epd's so his calves don't start with a 10 - 15 lbs disadvantage.Chap said:BE CAREFUL with SINGLE TRAIT SELECTION!
What happens when you continually line up low birth weight genetics? you get low birth weights, but you may also give up maternal calving ease. I have heard numerous reports form commericial men about their angus heifers being harder calving than at any time they can remember. CE epd (Calving Ease Direct) is much more important when evaluationg how a bull will actually calve out and MCE (Maternal Calving Ease - how easy a bulls daughters calve) needs to be evaluated as well, to be assured that the retained daughters aren't just low bw , but actually have the capability to have a calf.
I have a PB Simmental bull,CNS Exclusive, that is terrible on his BW epd, but his calving ease number is surprisingly high considering his recorded bw's. Calves come big (in lbs of live calf) but are born with minimal difficulty. his percentile breakdown is 5.7 CE (top 60%) 4.5 BW (bottom 5%), 77.3 YW (top 10%) and 4.5 MCE (top 20%). I can work with a bull like this, if I like his kind. In my business, light muscled, ugly ones are hard to sell, so I will give, to get some take. There are outliers in any population, if you want it all, you will have to dig deep, but can probably find something to fit most of your needs and expectations.
P-F said:Which is why it is so important to start with a sound one, b/c it takes generations to fix structure where as carcass quality can be improved in one!
red said:not sure why but topic got hijacked a little. I think Juli was speaking of more of bulls that are promoted as easy calving & then get complaints from breeders that their cow had a big one. People just don't take into count the cow's part as well as environmental situation.
No breed is everything to all people or we'd be seeing all cattle bred the same way.
Red
DL said:It is biology - there are no 100% guarantees
Calving ease is a combination of birth weight, calf shape, bulls BW, cows BW, cow (heifer) size, pelvic diameter, genetics, cow condition, environment, weather, diet, mineral program, management, location, and the phase of the moon
If more people did their homework when breeding heifers there would be fewer problems calving out heifers
Just because a bull is advertised as "calving ease" doesn't mean he is - if he has no calves on the ground be wary, esp with heifers
A useful tool is BW and CE EPDs - but it is only a tool and if the accuracy is low it is a pretty useless tool
If your goal is to raise show calve suse the clubby bulls on cows not heifers
If you goal is to get your fat sassy show heifer bred and you would like her to be around for a long time breed her to a high accuracy low BW, CE Red Angus bull - you get a live calf and a live heifer which is sure better than a dead "great one" and a paralyzed heifer