Flush questions

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RankeCattleCo

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If any one flushes or has any experience with flushing, what does the entire process cost to have a proffesional do it?  We're flushing a stellar Milkman x PB angus heifer.  I know prices very but what is the average for flush, hormones, and recips, the whole deal including having them do it on the farm.  What condition and what type of feed should they have?  She's on a show ration that has haylage, corn silage, high moisture ear corn and a home-made show grain and she hasn't lost an ounce of style and condition since she came off of her Co-op Show ration where we bought her from.  We're not flushing for only "sellable" calves but also to increase our herd size (since we only have to March heifers right now)  ;D
Otherwise we wouldn't be flushing a heifer.

Thanks in advance,
RCC
 

Doc

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I agree with knabe on not flushing a heifer. I have heard too many times of a heifer getting overstimulated & ruining her. But to answer your question, my guy charges $350 to flush , $50/egg to freeze, over 10 eggs $25/egg to freeze, $4.50 per day board for cow with calf at side. He charges $100 to implant direct thaw eggs or $50 if he froze it. Don't know about at the farm because he is only 25 miles from me so I take everything to him.
 

Warrior10

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RankeCattleCo said:
We've had more than him say we should do it cause she's good enough, I'll post some pictures as soon as I take some.
Its not whether she is good enough or not...I do not think anyone is questioning your opinion on that. They are trying to save you from ruining what sounds like a special heifer....
 

Till-Hill

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If your ET man is good I would not worry about ruining your heifer. With all this genomic stuff in Holstein's now heifers are getting the heck flushed out of them. I have been breeding a heifer for a guy every month with this being her 3rd flush and she is not even 13 months old yet.

If your heifer isn't very fertile to begin with flushing will not change that. And if she is very fertile you will get lots of eggs and she will make lots of natural babies.
 

CAB

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Till-Hill said:
If your ET man is good I would not worry about ruining your heifer. With all this genomic stuff in Holstein's now heifers are getting the heck flushed out of them. I have been breeding a heifer for a guy every month with this being her 3rd flush and she is not even 13 months old yet.

If your heifer isn't very fertile to begin with flushing will not change that. And if she is very fertile you will get lots of eggs and she will make lots of natural babies.
That's a whole different situation then. You are breeding his heifer on her natural heats and flushing one egg @ a time giving no super ovulation shots. They are worried that they may hurt the heifer's reproductive life by over super ovulating her or over stimulating.
 

Till-Hill

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No CAB people are stimulating the heck out of them. That particular heifer I am talking about had 8 first flush, 11 the 2nd and we breed her again next Wednesday. Now if your ET man thinks your going to get 20-30 eggs a flush then I will say you are going  to ruin her. Find an ET man with a brain and you will be fine.
 

CAB

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Till-Hill said:
No CAB people are stimulating the heck out of them. That particular heifer I am talking about had 8 first flush, 11 the 2nd and we breed her again next Wednesday. Now if your ET man thinks your going to get 20-30 eggs a flush then I will say you are going  to ruin her. Find an ET man with a brain and you will be fine.

Wow thanks for explaining in more detail. I'm actually thinking about flushing a virgin heifer and have had PPL on both sides of the fence as far as whether or not I should do it.
 

Till-Hill

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People get away with it all the time. If your heifer is good enough I would flush her now. Alot eaiser now without a calf on her and I like to do them early and still have them calve on time or flush them a couple times and more her back 6 months and if you like the calves do her again and get her back on time..........this is what we did on a heifer of mine that we got 3 eggs by sexed semen. Heat date 10-8, 10-21 4 cc fsh (2 cc am 2 cc pm), 10-22 3 cc fsh (1.5 am 1.5 pm), 10-23 1.5 am 1.2 pm, 10-24 1 cc am + 6cc lute 1 cc pm +4 cc lute, 10-25 .8 cc am..........
 

Till-Hill

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Oh and duh sorry the important thing about what we are talking about. Bred that heifer back next heat after the flush, vet missed her CL so thought she was open and I waited 2 months to set her up with the spring cows and luted her and yup there it was! 3 month old calf she dumped out. Reluted her couple weeks later and stuck her 1st service. Then the next year 1st service stuck and had set of twins and this year stuck 2nd service so by no means did I say we ruined her.......
 

hntwhitetail

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I think Cowboy on here could provide some very good insight.  I think that is his sn.
 

Cowboy

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I was acrually going to avoid posting to this -- as it will most likely cause some contraversy -- but seeing how you asked -- here goes!

Till-Hill, by his description, would make alot of people think this is an OK process for most hfrs -- that is absolutely the WRONG thing to think. Actually, VERY few hfrs will perform and do well as virgins with ET. Some do, yes, but not the majority. Looking at your S-O procedure, you gave that hfr " 9 " shots of Fsh, starting on day 13 -- along with 2 injections of Pgf2@. That is one heck of alot for a hfr, trust me.

Your result of 3 embryos is first off -- at least partly due to the fact you started her AFTER she had already gotten the signal to start regresion of her CL (Day 13 in most mature cows, ealier for most hfrs) This would prevent peak progesterone levels and lessen if not totaly stop response in most cattle -- especially hfrs. The dosage you gave her translates to a total of 31.25 Mg's of product, which would be VERY close to a cow dose here. In other words, that was plenty -- PLENTY -- for her. If she had been started at day 10, she would have done a lot more than 3 -- so be very very carefull -- nuf said.

I try to discourage my customers from doing hfrs for the most part unless they are a fall hfr being held over for a spring calf. That would put most of them 18 to 20 months old when we do them, so they have more time to mature out.

Your biggest risk will be from damage to the Fimbria (Infumdibulum) or the funnel like membrane surrounding the ovary that actually captures the eggs as they ovulate and channels them to the ovaducts. If you over stim a cow, that membrane will have to expand as large as the ovary does during the process. If they get too big they will actually have stratch marks, and as they heal later will adhere to the ovary and then you would have no way to get the eggs from the ovary to the uterus. IVF would then be your only hope.

Is it still worth the risk ???? Also keep in mind that alot of these hfs are not going to have mature hormone levels, so may not even take care of the eggs they do ovulate.

I use day 10 or 11, I use 7 or 8 shots of Fsh, and only ONE shot of Prostoglandin, most mature cows of Angus or Shorthorn breeding get about 32-34 Mg's of product, while Simmi and breeds close to them will get less than that -- in this case More is Not better.

I will quit now, I can almost bet I just started a war of words, but one thing is for sure -- 30 years and thousands of donors have taught me many things -- and this is just one of them!

I wish you all the best of luck with your programs -- just PLEASE be carefull with these hfrs!

Terry
 

Doc

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Thanks for posting . Also good to hear from you Cowboy, haven't seen you on here in awhile. Hope you had a good holiday season and have started off with a great new year!!
 

knabe

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It's important to manage any enterprise to try and beat the highest odds and seek out people who will agree with the riskiest procedures to allow one to go back and tell very one I told you so.  It's basically a lottery mentality.  Odds are a job and hard work is the path to success for the greatest number of people but some will long for a lottery process which only disguises and rewards unproductive behavior.
 

RankeCattleCo

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So from all of this.. the fact of the matter is that we would run to much of a risk of ruining this heifer (Who will most likely have better cow days then show, or so we hope) JUST TO GET A FEW SHOW HEIFERS AND REPLACEMENTS.  With this being the better of our two first heifers, we can’t afford to ruin her.  Would it just be better to let her calve once and then go and flush?

Just a side note, If you flush your cow, will you put the egg back in her? If you’re not planning on flushing her again until next breeding season that is…
 

frostback

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Save that egg for a recip. You also run a slight risk of multiple birth if the ET guy missed a embryo during the flush. You will give you donor a shot to bring her back in heat for that reason.  Just breed her when she comes back in heat.
 
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