GAIN ON GRASS The
Transcription
GAIN ON GRASS The
The Trailblazer Summer 2015 Volume 8, Issue 1 In last summer’s newsletter we featured a story about our “Gain on Grass Test”. Well, this isn’t a repeat of the article. Instead, we wanted to update you on what we have learned to date about our cattle and the grass test. GAIN ON GRASS Why is it important? Round 2 As a recap, we initiated the gain on grass test because we wanted to identify the genetics in our program that could excel on grass, with minimal supplementation, and not just those that gained well on feed. We recognize that ninety-nine percent of our customers don’t creep feed and neither do we at Bradley 3 Ranch. This means our cattle must have the ability to forage, convert on grass, grow, breed and produce pounds while on a predominantly forage based diet. It also means that we are subject to nature to dictate weaning weights relative to annual rainfall. After clearing mesquites and brush (and rattle snakes) off a piece of our old irrigated land, we now have an official location for the grass test. Needless, to say initially there was a steep learning curve for the “non-farmer” Bradley operation to keep the pivot rolling. With time and patience, we have figured out how important this irrigation piece is for our grass test. The quality of forage is extremely important for growth and proper development of our young bull prospects. Using both native and improved grasses we have developed a forage base that has survived and is now thriving. Initially, we anticipated that all bulls would gain similarly on grass. What we have learned is quite the contrary. There is a large spread amongst genetics of what bulls will graze throughout the day’s heat, shed quickly and gain the most. Some cattle have shown us the ability to gain on the side of their dam, on grass and continue on our feed test. At the same time, others simply are mediocre in their gains until they hit the actual Look for us and our booth at these trade shows / events: Working Ranch Rodeo Association Finals November 6 - 9 at Amarillo, TX New Mexico Stock Growers Association Convention December 4 - 6 at Albuquerque, NM www.bradley3ranch.com feed / concentrate test. We are learning there are definite differences in cattle that have generations of Bradley genetics and the “outside” genetics we have used. So why is this important to you as a beef producer? We aren’t seeing $7 corn any more so why should cost of gain on feed be a concern in my operation you might wonder? Very simply, long-term survivors in the beef industry are those who are low cost producers who can survive the ups and downs of markets. Feed, labor and depreciation are three of the highest expenses we face in the industry. If we can lower cowherd feed costs, we can get closer to attaining a long-term profitability. Any time we can lower cost of gain or maintenance costs in our operation, we are one step closer to profitability. In our gain on grass test, we have learned a very simple concept: cattle that gain on grass tend to be survivors. Heifers sired by bulls who were higher gainers on grass tend to be easier fleshing and stay in the herd longer due to their lower maintenance costs and breed back ability. And surprisingly, our cattle that gain well on grass are not an industry stereotyped “pud” that has no growth ability. In reality, gain on grass is beneficial to your operation for several reasons: optimum weaning weights without the cost of creep feed, lower energy maintenance levels in replacement heifers and bulls that maintain flesh through out the breeding season. Each of these is equated to fewer dollars flowing out of a feedsack. Which Traits Make the Most Money in a Cow Operation? Today the American Angus Association publishes 18 EPD’s, 20 Genomic Traits with HD panels, and calculates 7 Dollar Indexes. That is a lot of data! typically, those open cows have had a relative that has been sold for the same reasons. This is how we select for fertility. We sell our cows as bred eleven year old cows. Those cows have had a calf every year in that 60 day breeding season and have lasted and raised a calf in our harsh environment. Out of those eleven year old cows, we select our Donor Cows that we flush. If a cow has proven herself by raising a calf every year, has been bred to several different bulls and has ratioed over 100 for weaning weight, yearling weight, intramuscular fat, and ribeye size, they are eligible to be a donor cow. This year we have selected two cows that we will flush that meet this criterion and one of those cows is a five time Pathfinder cow. There would not be very many cows in the Angus Breed that have made Pathfinder five times! We flush these cows because they have proven themselves for longevity. Their sons are a value for our buyers during our annual bull sale and we keep their daughters to put back in our herd. But what should you be looking at to determine what makes you the most money? Is it $B? That is the number that is published on the bottom right part of the EPD page so it must be the best. Right? Well, we first have to look by James Henderson at what $B is. It is a terminal index. It tells you which animals will make the most money in the feedlot and packing sectors of the beef industry. Do you own a feedlot? Do you own a packing plant? Do you even retain ownership of your cattle through the feeding phase and sell them on the rail? If you do any of those things, $B is a very important number. However, if you are running a cow/calf operation you should take the $B and add the $EN to come up with the true value for your operation, because the $EN is the number that tells you how efficient your cows are in raising that calf. You have to look at the total operation to get to the correct number. Does your seed stock producer have 25% of his cow herd that is the daughter of a cow that made it to eleven years of age with our selection criterion? Bradley 3 Ranch is one of a select few that have operated in all phases of the beef industry, including feedlots, packing plants, and retail merchandising of beef. We know the value of animals in each of those sectors. However, we still select cattle the way we have for 60 years, because all of the data we collect and analyze, tell us that fertility and longevity still pay the most bills for cow/calf producers. If you are selling your calves at weaning is $W the number you should be looking at? It does tell you the relative value of your calves at weaning, but again you need to add the $EN to get the net value of that calf at weaning. You can have a big calf at weaning but if it cost you too much to get it to weaning, you have not gained anything. However, as I look back on my education in Animal Science, one of the first things taught in basic Animal Science is that fertility and longevity make more money than any of the other traits. Is that still true today? As I run my numbers, I believe with the price of cattle today, that is more true today than it has ever been. Do we have an EPD for fertility? We have a Heifer Pregnancy EPD and that is a start but it does not tell the whole story of lifetime fertility. Do we have a longevity EPD? No. So if these two traits make us the most money in a cow/calf operation, how do we buy genetics that will move us in the direction of being better in those traits? The first answer to that question is how much homework do you do on your seed stock producer? How do they raise their cattle? Do they do it like you do, or do they raise cattle to chase the current fad such as $B? At Bradley 3 Ranch, we raise cattle pretty much the way it has been done for 60 years. The cows have to forage in typically 1200 acre pastures that are both rough and covered in brush. We use our home raised herd sires (27 head) to breed our cows in a 60 day time period. Any cow that is open at preg check is sold, regardless of pedigree or the dollar value of the calves that have been sold out of her. We have found that 2 THANK YOU to Matador Ranch for their selection of B3R X188 as their pick of the cows we offered in our 2015 Sale. A daughter of our T232 bull, she ranks in the breed’s top 10% for Calving Ease Direct, top 5% for Docility and top 15% for $W. This balanced trait female is the kind that has kept Bradley 3 Ranch in business for over 60 years! We appreciate Matador Ranch’s confidence in our genetics and our program! Watch for her progeny in their program in years to come. they were dry or low. The benefits of have having cleaned out ponds are well worth it when the rains come. People made a big difference for us, from offering hay at low cost, to grass leases, to words of encouragement... our customers and friends were consistently there and supportive. We learned to live by these words, “Today, we make the best decision we can and act on it. And we will not look back.” So with that being said, we are adding a second pivot at the ranch. Our goal is to attempt to be better prepared for the next drought! The lessons we learned from a DROUGHT. Through out the drought we came to appreciate our earlier efforts for weed control in native grass pastures. This helped us to have beneficial by Mary Lou and Minnie Lou forage available for the cattle that remained at On March 17, 2015, we moved a large majority of our cowherd back headquarters. We recognized the importance of to our headquarters ranch. As you already know, from 2011 until rotational grazing, become better observers of our 2014 we experience a historical drought. Many lessons were learned grass and condition of our cattle. about our cattle, our land, our tenacity and ourselves. We thought these lessons were valuable and wanted to share with you. We learned that heavy milking cows with greater energy requirements simply are not meant to live During such a drought, one does not plan but instead reacts. Your in tough situations. Our cow herd is a better herd plan becomes the ability to change. Stocktank ponds) water at least today and is made up of survivors that will benefit allows you to feed cattle for a period of time while you are working us and our loyal customers. on the next solution. We cleaned out many of our stocktanks while REAL PERFORMANCE MEASURES COMBINED WITH GENOMIC DATA GIVES YOU REAL WORLD RESULTS More and more seedstock producers are now just sending off DNA and using this information only. At Bradley 3 Ranch, you still get birth weights, weaning weights, ultra sound, yearling weights, gain on grass, gain on feed and scrotal measures. We at Bradley 3 Ranch are committed to getting the actual data on our cattle and combining this with genomic data to make selection, culling, mating and marketing decisions. We go the distance to provide you with large contemporary groups, performance data and genomic data. If your seedstock provider is just using 50K data and not delivering the actual information you could be dealing with some unknowns or less accurate genetic predictions! Z161, one of our resident Charolais herd sires. Watch for his sons in the 2016 bull sale! His daughters will lead our Charolais program in years to come. “Hi Mary Lou, I hope all is well in Texas, its hard to believe its been another year that has came and went. The heifers we bought from you guys a few years back have really grown up into beautiful cows and we have our first crop of replacement heifers this year to breed. I keep thinking I’m going to send you pictures but I never seem to get around to doing it. I have a little herd of Lowline Angus cattle and last year I had a little bull calf that was out of T299 that weaned 675lbs. out of a 1000lb. cow. Its been fun for us crossing great black Angus genetics and watching small cattle raise a calf almost as big as their dam. Thanks Jesse Montoya” THANK YOU for making our 2015 Sale a HUGE SUCCESS! LITTLE BIRDS CAN BE SO TRUTHFUL Today, with all this political correctness I find myself being accused at times not abiding by the recent culture change that has engulfed the nation. I only wish the younger generation had the privilege of knowing some that I have had the opportunity to be with. They were called characters for good reason but had a personality which is sorely lacking in the 2000’s. I had many occasions to meet upstanding citizens who were also called characters in my two years with the Texas Angus Association. I was a 21 year old who had never been out in the world of bright lights and forbidden streets. There are many stories to tell but one remains vivid in my memory after sixty one years. I will call him Mr. C., one of the larger cotton farmers in his day and one of the first to have irrigation in west Texas. He was appointed sale chairman for all the state association sales and attended each. The association was having to squeeze expenses after hiring me as a fieldman and P.R. person at $250.00 a month plus my travel expenses, so I most generally traveled with the President or Mr. C.. Mr. C. was a gentleman farmer, he always dressed in a suit, white shirt, tie and good hat but he did chew tobacco that ran down both sides of his mouth and onto his clothes. Mr. C. drove a pink Cadillac the biggest and fastest one made by General Motors. Mrs. C. was always at his side. I would guess they were in there sixties, Mrs. C. suddenly got sick and died within a few months. I never saw any one as heartbroken as Mr. C! All of us, Angus members, the ringmen, neighbors and friends worried about him for a couple of months and then he gave us other worries. He appeared at a sale, (I wasn’t invited) with this female, I hesitate to call her a lady. One of the ringmen, Bennie, worked for The Cattleman Magazine and he had quickly recognized how innocent I was to the world. He saw to it that I never got in a spot that I couldn’t get out of... so on this day he came over to me and said, “do you know what that person is that Mr. C. has picked up”. I told Bennie that from some western movies I thought perhaps I recognized where she might have come from. The entire association was torn up over Mr. C. and his way of healing a broken heart. I lost my ride and started riding with Mr. H., the president, who drove a pink Chrysler. I just thought Mr.C. drove fast, Mr.H. had a heavier foot, he was a chain cigar smoker, kept a box of cigars in the seat beside him. We never went anywhere that we didn’t get pulled over, but a ticket was never issued, he was good in sharing his Cuban cigars with state troopers. This ole’ gal continued to be at Mr. C’s side at every event and everyone was afraid she would take him for everything and then leave him again broken hearted. Then one day he called, saying I was to ride with him to the east Texas sale on Saturday. Of course I told him I looked forward to our visit. He told me he would meet me at 7.am. in front of the Exchange Building at the Fort Worth Stockyards. True to his word, he was parked when I drove up but the ole’ gal wasn’t in the car. He was visiting with some cattle buyers and I told him I would go up to the office and by Minnie Lou Bradley get what was needed to clerk the sale and for him continue to visit. I got back to the car and he pitched me the keys to the trunk. I opened the trunk, startled is no way to describe what I was seeing. Thank goodness my vocal cords shut down or all of North Side Fort Worth would have heard me. There lay ladies undies, heavy on the lace, but oh so thin panties, bra and slip but no corpse. I thought, “What do I do, there will be Angus breeders to help me unload catalogs, adding machine etc., they can’t see what I am staring at!” My mind was swirling, I didn’t want to touch them but knew I had to get rid of them. I couldn’t throw them on North Main, my only option was to stuff them in the well behind the spare tire and pray not to have a blow out. I finally got to breathing normal and told Mr. C. I had everything loaded and was ready when he was. He looked at his watch and said we had time for breakfast. Had he for gotten what was in his trunk or did he even know, had they been planted, had he and the female had a fight? How was I going to make conversation with him the next few hours? He said, “lets go to the Texas Hotel Coffee Shop.” I had been told that was the placed to be seen if you were in society or money and that wealthy widows resided their permanently. I was wondering what might be going through Mr. C.’ mind but he was “cool”. We walked into a beautiful room, unlike anything I had ever seen, nothing resembled the coffee shop in Hydro, Oklahoma where I grew up with striped overall clad farmers. The booths were all made out of beautiful wood, the lady sitting in the first booth had to be the most elegant lady I had ever seen, she was dressed in blue, different shades and a big picture hat to match, her hair and makeup was immaculate. I had never seen a lady that looked that great, however I was taken back by a little blue parakeet setting on her shoulder Mr. C., the gentleman he could be, did make it past the booth and we settled into the second one, we had just ordered when the little blue parakeet fluttered by me and landed on Mr.C.’s shoulder. There is no speech teacher who can talk as plain as what that bird said loud and clear, “HELLO, YOU SORRY SON OF A BITCH,” and then fluttered away. Mr. C looked over at me with a big grin on his face and said, “How did he know?” What was I to say? As we were leaving, Mr. C. tipped his hat to the lady in blue and her ever so little, but wise truthful bird. Herdsires Leading the Way B3R Basic Z235 Reg. # 17522330 Birthdate: 10/25/12 Pictured as a 3 year old Owned by Genex and Bradley 3 Ranch Basic Z235 was purchased by Genex in our 2014 sale. He collected very well for them and now resides back at the ranch and we will use him as a natural service sire. Sired by Back to Basics and out of a S053 daughter, he is a calving ease sire that will leave daughters in your herd for years to come. Z235 ranks in the breed’s top 2% for CED, 5% for BW, 10% for Scrotal, 1% for Docility, 15% for Heifer Pregnacy and 5% for $EN. Contact Genex or Bradley 3 Ranch for semen. B3R Back to Basics U077 Reg. # 16317735 Birthdate: 09/25/08 Pictured as a 7 year old Owned by Bradley 3 Ranch, Three Trees Ranch and Silver Spur Ranches Back to Basics is the “No miss, count ‘em as you drive by”, calving ease sire! He has been used across the U.S and in South America as a “go to” bull for calving ease, docility and success in large heifer breeding projects. As a trait leader for calving ease, Back to Basics ranks in the top 1% for CED and BW. Couple this with top 1% for Docility, top 15% for DMI, top 5% for Heifer Pregnancy, top 5% for $EN and top 10% for Marbling and you have a sire that produces daughters that work well for the long term. Contact Bradley 3 Ranch or ORIgen for semen. B3R Pioneer Wave Y409 Reg. # 17217486 Birthdate: 09/15/11 Pictured as a 2 year old Owned by ABS Global and Bradley 3 Ranch Easily one of the most unique bulls ever raised at Bradley 3 Ranch, Y409 combines growth, carcass value and fleshing ease genetics into one package. He ranks in the top 15% for WW, 20% for YW, 20% for RADG, 10% for marbling, 1% for REA, 10% for $W, 12% for $F, 4% for $G, 10% for $QG, 5% for YG and 4% for $B. Few sires in the Angus breed present these kind of tabulations and still remain positive for $EN. Contact ABS Global for semen. Good afternoon hope all is well. I just wanted to show you a Bradley bull we purchased 3 yrs ago . They have sired a very nice set of heifers and this will be the 1st crop to keep since the 1st crop was sent to the feed lot . We will have data by mid-summer. This year’s calves will make you blink! Say hi to your Mom and James. Thanks ! John Menzies Strategic Planning Profitable cow herds In my previous two articles, I provided a list of principles, ideas and processes for improving ranch profitability. I concluded last month with the following: “Strive for a trouble-free, problem-free cow herd with good reproduction — accomplishing this on your range or pasture with minimal added inputs. How would it be to never have to pull a calf, never have to doctor an animal or never have to retrieve an animal that broke through the fence? How much less labor, equipment, facilities and tools would you need? “If a high percentage of your cows got pregnant and then subsequently weaned a good healthy calf — even if they aren’t the biggest in the area — how would that help your marketing? And, if they did that with minimal feed inputs, how much more profitable would that be? Perfection is never achieved, but excellence can be.” The objective is to improve herd and whole ranch profitability. By recognizing the interconnectedness of herd and pasture management, economics and marketing, it becomes apparent that maximums are never the most profitable level of production. Most calves and yearlings raised in the U.S. will go through the feedlot and on to traditional slaughter. Cow-calf producers feel pressure from cattle feeders and packers to make cattle bigger, faster-growing and better-grading. These are all 70 beefmagazine.com good objectives. However, as cow-calf producers, we must remember we’re running about 25% more cows and yearling replacements every year than we’re selling calves to the feedlot. Therefore, we must ensure that our cow herds are efficient and trouble-free. My method for getting profitable cow herds doesn’t align with buying bulls with the highest EPDs (expected progeny differences) for weaning weight, milk, carcass quality and yield grade. However, this will work nicely for ranches intentionally terminal-crossing with the practice of selling or feeding every calf. I think about 30% to 40% of the cows in the U.S. should be bred this way every year. In this article, I want to address producers who develop their own replacements and should also be providing replacement cows to terminal-crossing programs. I don’t mean to diminish the importance of good growth and adequate milk production in our cow herds. However, a number of things are more important. Here are three: • Make sure a cow-calf operation is the best fit for your land and your abilities. • Work toward a cow herd that requires very little overhead: equipment, facilities and labor. • Replace as much fed feed with grazing as possible. For many producers, that’s a lot more than you think. I’m always amazed when I visit unfamiliar areas of the U.S. and hear from producers there all the reasons they MUST feed cows. I usually don’t have to drive far, however, to find someone who feeds very little and gets good performance. Your cows must fit where you are, and get by with minimal care, thus only requiring good cattle handling facilities for routine immunizations, pregnancy diagnosis, etc. The cows must graze most of their feed need, receiving only minimal and timely supplementation. So, cut overheads, reduce fed-feed inputs and cull the right cows — opens, dries, wild cows, those that need individual attention, the few that wean poor calves, and those with functional problems such as bad udders, lameness, etc. After a few years of culling these cows, you won’t have to cull many each year. Even with excellent reproduction, most of the culls will be opens and dries. Remember, EPDs work, and that is often a problem. If we want lots of growth and milk, we can get it. The problem is that there is always a cost. It may be in reproduction, reduced stocking rates or more fed feed. Finally, don’t buy bulls whose daughters won’t fit what you’re trying to do. ❚❚ Burke Teichert, a consultant on strategic planning for ranches, retired in 2010 as vice president and general manager of AgReserves Inc. He resides in Orem, Utah. Contact him at burketei@comcast.net. March 2015 Reprinted with permission from BEEF Magazine