Sambosu said:
Tallcool1 and chambero, thanks for replying and positive comments. The reason I said 1250 is I have been told that the worse thing we could do is turn him into a sloppy fat steer. He has a really nice finish on him now, so I am trying to push him hard and just let him cruise right now. Currently he isn't on a finisher and gets plenty of hay. Just trying to do what I can to ensure he keeps growing. Keeping track of his daily gain by weighing him every 2 weeks. With your experience with Heat Wave's Tallcool1 and chambero, do they normally continue to grow during their last 105-200lbs?
He PROBABLY won't grow any taller, but he will darn sure get thicker with his last 150-200 pounds (which is why you stood 3rd to a couple steers that had a couple hundred pounds on him).
I agree that you don't want to feed him to the point that he has a basketball for a brisket, but you want him fat for sure! I can't tell how tall he is because I don't know how tall your daughter is and I don't know how big the blocking chute behind him is. He appears to be fairly tall, (or not short for sure) and with that I would say he can handle the weight without getting sloppy.
As far as the pastern conversation, it isn't an issue. The steer is not fit in the picture...it was Blow and Go. Your helpers/fitters would have fixed that in about 10 seconds if the steer has been fit. What is giving the appearance of puffiness is actually just hair that is too short and coarse to stand up, and too long to lay down.
Short pasterns, or lack of flex are indicators of potential movement problems. The pasterns themselves are not an issue at all......if the steer can move. You have to be realistic and use common sense when you are evaluating structure on a STEER. You (all of us) have seen steers with perfect structure on the ground that can't come within 10" of filling their tracks. The problem is that they can't move, not their pastern structure. You (all of us) have seen steers with almost NO flex that can move just fine and fill their tracks. Your steer is somewhere in between, and the movement is way more important than the pastern...especially if you can keep that hair growing!