JoeDirt
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 1, 2007
- Messages
- 283
dori36 said:SlickTxMaine said:Thanks to all for your thoughts and opinions. I also told my son that with a different judge on the same day, the lineup may have been very different. Oh well, these past 10 months have been very educational! I have attached a couple more pics for your viewing. Thanks agian!
He's not a bad steer at all, imo, and he's plenty wide from behind. I think a judge could penalize him a little for not carrying muscle down past the round as well as some steers may. Also, from the pics, I'd guess that he's not quite finished. Cattle dependably put their fat on from "front to back". So, usually, the first place to begin to fill is the brisket. Then, as they mature and add fat, the fat spreads down the ribs, moves back, and finally seems to end in the cod as well as around the tailhead. I can't see much fat in his brisket at all and also can't see any around his tailhead. He has lots of natural thickness so maybe if he'd carried a little more finish, he just might have placed a little higher. Assuming this was a terminal show for you, I think many judges would have penalized him a little for being underfinished.
I think you said it exactly how I would say it and I would add What CM Cattle said
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It's a little hard to see just what your steer looks like when viewed from behind, but my opinion, from a genetic point of view, is that he will only have so much natural thickness. His hooks aren't going to get any wider than his genetics allow. You can get him fatter but width is pretty hard to add. A person can "stand 'em wide" but if the natural width isn't there, they'll look sort of peaked from bottom to top. An experienced judge, or cattle person, can tell the difference. Even from birth, calves have to stand wide. Even when they're newborns, you can see the ones that will hang some serious muscle on their rounds because the little guys stand so wide right from the start. They look sort of funny and like a truck could drive between those back legs. Those whose back feet want to be stepping on each other will never, imo, turn into those really wide finished steers. So, I'd suggest that when you're looking to replace this steer, you look at them from behind without anyone posing them. Just watch them walk and see how they track. Try to find a way to do this when they're walking free, not when someone is leading them. Then, watch them as they stand casually. They should stand wide by choice, not because someone is posing them. Also look for good length, thickness across the top, a clean front, and nice extension up front. I'd also ask you to remember that your show was just one judge's opinion on one day. Another judge might have penalized the first and reserve calves for being overfinished. That's just as much a fault, in my book, as one that is correctly finished so as to grade choice or better and yield about a 2. Best of luck. Nice steer, from what I can see.
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