aj
Well-known member
Who is DMH?
DMH Cattle Company. Scroll down to Minnesota on this Heritage Shorthorn Society Breeders page. Their program is essentially crossing old Heritage beef sires from the pool of semen Roy Lovaas assembled on Native Shorthorn cows. Then they use the sons and daughters from those matings in different combinations useful in different contexts. Native/ Hertage Shorthorn genetics range from milking to beef type. The Haumont Maid of Promise 189th cow and the Rosabell 436th cow have worked especially well in the beef type crosses....or so I think.aj said:Who is DMH?
That Cat 20 is a type changer.aj said:The DMH Felix bull really interests me.
In my opinion big should be measured in pounds rather than inches. Clipper King of Bapton weighed 2650 pounds that is big enough for me. I am sure Cat 20 weighed well over a ton. I have a young granddaughter of Clipper King of Bapton that my granddaughter showed in 4H that still has not had any grain. I believe she has a bright future in producing grass fed genetics. I recently sold a steer that weighed 1250 and hung an 830 pound carcass that sold for $2.80 a pound hanging weight. He was a straight Native Shorthorn whose mama was might weigh 1200 and his daddy is not quite a frame score 4. That is profitable.oakview said:Performance, indicated to some degree by weaning weight, ADG, and yearling weight certainly has some significance to me. Many of you aren't old enough to remember 350-400 pound weaning weights on good Iowa bluegrass pasture, but I am. I am more interested in calves that have the genetic ability to perform much better than that on my same pasture, handled the same way. I don't need a lecture on the efficiencies of small cows. The cows that raised those 350 pound calves didn't come close to weaning half their body weight. Their udders hung so low the calves had to almost lie down to nurse. I don't care what anybody else does, but I'm not real interested in cattle that look like Clipper King of Bapton or Cat 20. If you ever have a chance, read the Leader 21 story from the old Thomas-Gordon-Draper sales catalogs. He was an outlier, not at all like the other bulls in the sale where Bob Gordon bought him. That's why he bought him so cheap. He became popular as a show sire. That's why ABS had him and there's so much semen around. He sired some performance and increased frame size. If you'd look through the old Shorthorn Worlds, about half of the Shorthorn bulls advertised in the late 60's and early 70'w were sons of Leader 21. Breeders were looking for what he offered. Most of the heritage bulls that are being used today, were also popular show sires in their day. I have semen in my tanks from a dozen of those old bulls. All but one was either a good show bull in his day or sired some show winners.
Jacob B said:Oak view....extremely wise words couldn’t say it better. Do what works for you. Not what someone else tells you works for you wherever you are in this world. There is a huge disconnect from the real world and what we can do to an animal to make em expectable in the show ring. Do what works for you and what makes you happy for whatever end of spectrum you enjoy