JSchroeder
Well-known member
I do think it's funny that market show steers still have that bad rep for movement issues when the show ring is the only place a 1300 lb steer packed with muscle and fat is actually expected to move.
twistedhshowstock said:I tend to find it goes the opposite way to much myself. Yes I believe we have to recognize structural issues, but its a market show. In a market show we are supposed to be judging the animals as if they are going to hang on the rail that day, in that situation product and market readiness(finish) are the most important traits to look for. In fact I just had a committe member for a fairly large county fair call me to get me to submit my information and price to judge their show next yr. One of their concerns with past judges is that they tend to value stucture and style over product to much. Their issue is that their carcass contest is always completely backwards from the live show. Understanding that we will never completely match live evaluation with the rail, there is concern when the 2 are so far apart. In judging a market show we are supposed to be selecting the calf that we think is most likely to hang the best carcass on the rail. When they evaluate on the rail they arent in the least concerned with how that calf walked or how stylish he was, I am not saying we should throw structure and style completely out of show ring, but when they arent a factor at all on the rail, then they shouldnt be very high on our priority list in the show ring.
Beyond that, using a finished steer that was fed for show or in the feedlot to determine possible structure issues in his mama and sisters is kinda like comparing apples to oranges, yes they are both fruit and both grow on trees, beyond that the environment and methods that get them to us are fairly different. I would never expect a heifer the same frame size and age as the steers in my barn to carry near the body mass and weight that my steers are, when ideally I not only expect my steers to do that I would love for them to have more. We affect that by castrating the steers and taking away hormones which affects metabolism and how they use feed, we also tend to push a lot hotter feed to steers. We push steers to be 1300+ pounds, finished, and ready for market long before they mature skeletally. All of that can have negative impacts on structural soundness. While if heifers are fed properly to be replacement females we are going to support skeletal soundness and maturity above all else. So saying that a steer that is post legged or tight strided or pops a little when he is 14-15 months old, over 1300 pounds and no where near to skeletally mature is going to mean that his contemporary heifers will have the same issues is not a very sound advice, b/c hopefully if those contemporary heifers are being raised as replacements then they havent been raised in nearly the same manner.
leanbeef said:I have to disagree with the notion that the winner of the live show has to win the carcass show in order to validate a judge's evaluation of the live cattle. If we just want to know which animal is the highest marbling or the highest yielding calf, there's no need to HAVE a live show! There are other factors--like soundness--that become part of the puzzle when we evaluate them live, so it stands to reason that the same calf doesn't win both shows every time. That's not to say the winner of the live show shouldn't hang a respectable carcass...he absolutely should! Because that SHOULD BE an important part of the puzzle as well. A live show is an opinion and it's subjective...it might even change if you lead the same cattle back to the same judge a few days later, and that's because the cattle change...they have some days that are better than other days, and it's a subjective evaluation based on the information and the opinions of that judge on that day. I agree with the comment that was made about an excuse not to breed a great one! Too many people want their good one to be considered great, and if we could all see them just for what they are, we'd make more progress toward making the next generation a little better. We can still appreciate and respect the what's good in each one without being too critical, but we also have to keep that ideal in mind if we want to keep moving em in that direction.
DLD said:I'm as much about soundness as anybody - I really agree with what rtmcc and qbcattle are saying. Matter of fact I had a couple of paragraphs typed adding my two cents, but before I posted it, twisted's last reply came up. I read it, and I agreed with it, and I cancelled that post and went to bed and tried to sleep, then the light finally flashed on in my head... We've been to 6 shows in the past month, and looking back over a wide array of judging styles just at those shows, it finally clicked for me. We have talked about the need to improve soundness so much, that some judges have become absolutely paranoid about using any animal they see even the tiniest thing in that they think might be construed as a soundness issue. With some, it has almost become a vendetta of sorts - they're out to rid the world (or at least their show ring, by golly) of all structral issues, big or small. Much as we need soundness, we don't need that either.
Hoosier said:OHB - I'll take a stab at your early maturing question first. To me, early maturing is short boned, headed, bodied, etc. Those calves get there quick but never get to an optimum size, like finish at 1000 or 1050 instead of 1250 or 1300. A lot of these little headed and short cannon boned ones won't grow size-wise and typically get fat sooner (steers) or run out of gas and are smaller framed mature females.
Now, to clarify about my belly/deep ribbed statement. When it comes to feedlot cattle, extra rib, belly, depth of rib, or whatever term you choose to use equals one thing -- extra guts. And by extra guts I mean actual guts - stomach, intestines, basically all internal organs. And while all these organs are used by the packer, whether sold as specialty "meats", for research, or any of the other variety of products they are used for, I, as a feeder, am not getting paid for how much the internal organs of an animal weighs if you sell on a value based system (grid or hanging weight). I realize that selling fats on live weight that, yes, technically you get paid for everything, but packers would much rather handle red meat than organs. They will pay a feeder more for cattle that consistently yield over 63% than to someone whose cattle yield less (63% is considered average yield on beef breed cattle, dairy breeds are lower). I had a buyer tell me once that cattle are ready to kill when you have "fed the gut off 'em", meaning they have been fed high energy feed long enough to lose the hay/grass belly, because they no longer need it. I realize that is completely opposite of females, but cows have to survive on roughage, and they have to eat a large volume to get their nutritional requirements. That is a big reason we feed straw instead of hay in the feedlot. A little straw goes a long way in terms of keeping the rumen going in cattle that are being fed hard. We have found that cattle will go to a bale of hay and eat a large volume, but will only eat a few bites of straw, reducing gut fill, and in turn eat more energy dense feed and get fat more efficiently. Knabe, you are correct saying that yield is based on hot carcass weight, fat cover and kph fat. And no, excess fat doesn't cause poor yield. Actually it is the opposite. Cattle with extra fat, at least to a degree, often yield higher than under conditioned cattle. I guess i find this situation to be similar to wet grain (forgive the comparison, it's the first thing that popped into my head). If a steer is like a kernel of corn, which is heavier, a kernel of 30% moisture corn, or 15% corn? The 30%. But all you get with that weight is 15% more water, no more actual corn. Fat cattle work the same way. If you have two identical steers in terms of carcass weight and fat cover, on weighing 1250 and the other weighing 1300, all you are gitting with that extra 50 pounds is more guts, not red meat, and as a result, lower yield. I guess I will quit rambling now, sorry for the ANSCI 101 lesson, but I just wanted to explain my thought process as clearly as possible.
twistedhshowstock said:I agree this has been one of the best true debates we have seen on here in a while. Most of the time they turn into big ol arguments with name calling and degrading each other if everybody doesnt agree. This time, even though there was difference of opinion, everyone remained civil and seemed to see the validity of everyones point of view.
Obie--I would be interested in knowing what show you are referring to...I won't ask you to mention the judge's name.obie105 said:At state fair we had a judge for a breed show that said he would give up structure and soundness for mass and body. This was for a purebred show on the heifers and bulls. I found it very wrong to ok some structure flaws especially when the show had over 200 head and the heifer that won had no base width and couldn't walk. There were much better ones left standing.
sent u a PM obie...can't wait for a reply!obie105 said:At state fair we had a judge for a breed show that said he would give up structure and soundness for mass and body. This was for a purebred show on the heifers and bulls. I found it very wrong to ok some structure flaws especially when the show had over 200 head and the heifer that won had no base width and couldn't walk. There were much better ones left standing.