Most of you folks are a long ways from me out here in Neb, we are so slow this past year and even now due to the drought it is pathetic. We have abut a dozen donors here, and the closest one to home is over 400 miles. For the first time in history, all but one cow out there is a Shorthorn. Some of these tend to be a little tuff to make work, but that is why they are here and not in some large center where they are just a number on the wall. Long story.
To answer your question about timing, I spent alot of time in the early years breeding these cows multiple times, why I did that was beyond me, but as far as the professors were concerned, that is what needed done. I was always dissapointed with the results. All that work, all the stress on the cows just to get half the eggs fertile. I said that was enough. These donors are no different than a regular cow in heat. Just because they are going to ovulate more than one does NOT mean they are going to do it for hours on end and even days. It just does not work that way.
I never touch a cow until she is completely OUT of heat -- and I mean tired and laying down resting -- for at least 6 hours. I could care less what time that makes me go out to the chute, it is HER deal and HER time -- if you let the cow dictate when she is ready, you will never be sorry. Use GOOD semen, go in there one time and get it done right, and leave her be.
I have never told, commercially any way, how I do things here. But now, I am pushing 60 this fall, I won't be able to do this forever. What is the point of keeping it a secret ?? I wait till the cow is at least 6 to 8 hours past standing, or even trying to ride. Nothing going on. I go there with 2 units of semen, I will place that semen one unit per horn just a couple inches forward of the cervix to make sure each side has a complete unit in it so that there is no chance of scar tissue from calving preventing even distribution up the horns. This works extremely well. As I said, most people laugh when I tell them we get over 95% fertilized eggs from these cows. It is not hard to do IF you wait and be patient. It is nothing for me to be out there at 2 AM breeding a cow -- of course I start these in the evening, so they are in strong heat in the AM when it is all said and done.
Didn't mean to make this so long -- sorry. I am very pasionate about what I do here, nothing will make me more unhappy that to go flush a cow and find a bunch of unfertilized eggs. Timing is second ONLY to semen quality -- if you screw the pooch there, it won't matter how good the semen is -- it just won't get it done! Leave her alone -- WAIT - you won't be sorry!
Good luck to every one -- I hope we can keep things going this year, if it stays dry here another year -- we may be done for. Love the area, hate the weather, and wish every one was closer! Oh well
Terry