Mooooo wrote: » Would it have taken 2kg a piece for the last 90 days to get that far? @30c/kget twud be 54 euro. Then again a different day in the mart and they wouldn't make the fleshy price. For the 10 or twenty extra not a whole pile in it I guess
Mooooo wrote: » What make? Will warranty cover it? Got a text from my tank this morning saying wash stopped due to low water and check filters. Went messing around for 30 mins only to click that it was the farm pump not the tank at fault. Wait an hour then for the thing to wash before milking. Have two Wells one for house and one for farm so was able to switch over till I get the farm well fixed. Another few euro gone now, balls
Mooooo wrote: » When buying our tank, maintenance guy was advising against packo based on agitators etc going but also I suspect because he was having difficulty getting packo to reimburse him for repairs
Timmaay wrote: » Know a chap with a packo about 2yrs old, both chemical pumps have given up the ghost, out of warranty, and cost something like 350 to replace each time.
whelan2 wrote: » Is he with glanbia? Would the bulk tank maintenance not cover it?
mahoney_j wrote: Offloaded 24 fr Bulls this am ,born from 01/02 to 08/03 .average weight 168 kg .average price 270 .no meal since 19/05 .left me 84 euro a piece after costs including labour of 50 per calf .much fleshier calves weighing 210 /230 kg made 335/350'but by looks of it ate a lot more meal than mine .said id off load now before big flush comes .could of fed more meal and got better weights but would I have made any more ???
Timmaay wrote: Know a chap with a packo about 2yrs old, both chemical pumps have given up the ghost, out of warranty, and cost something like 350 to replace each time.
orm0nd wrote: » Saw your post last night MJ and TBH would have been interested in a couple but had already promised a guy ld meet him at ennis mart. No fr in the runner ring but saw a couple of hex males about 220 kg making 780. Appeared to have been multiple suckled Small coloured cattle were an utter rob. Needless to say I didn't stay too long.
mahoney_j wrote: » Offloaded 24 fr Bulls this am ,born from 01/02 to 08/03 .average weight 168 kg .average price 270 .no meal since 19/05 .left me 84 euro a piece after costs including labour of 50 per calf .much fleshier calves weighing 210 /230 kg made 335/350'but by looks of it ate a lot more meal than mine .said id off load now before big flush comes .could of fed more meal and got better weights but would I have made any more ???
Keepgrowing wrote: Moral of the story, sell calves at 2-3 weeks at €70-100 and let someone else rear them. It calls into question some of the claims here regarding the importance of calf sales. Calf sales are only important if your shoving out calves at >€200
kevthegaff wrote: » If calves are making 200+, good possibility cow yield/fertility may suffer
whelan2 wrote: why?
kevthegaff wrote: » Longer gestation with blues,limos, charlies, simmentals. I had angus this year and they were a bit too big, got good money but felt it was a little hard on the cows to recover
kevthegaff wrote: » whelan2 wrote: why? Longer gestation with blues,limos, charlies, simmentals. I had angus this year and they were a bit too big, got good money but felt it was a little hard on the cows to recover
Keepgrowing wrote: » Moral of the story, sell calves at 2-3 weeks at €70-100 and let someone else rear them. It calls into question some of the claims here regarding the importance of calf sales. Calf sales are only important if your shoving out calves at >€200
Mooooo wrote: » Match the bull to the cows, only use ai blues, AA and some HE on cows and only aa on heifers or first calvers. Even easier calving aa if you hold them till 5 or 6 weeks they will fill out a a bit then if u want. Out of hol/fr anyway. Dbz is the blue bull I use, hasn't gone over time yet. Wouldn't go near limo or charlaois due to gestation length. That's when the calf gets too big I reckon
yewtree wrote: » On fragmented farms would it be more profitable to lease out owned Outside blocks tax free and cut additional enterprises? provided you can get a suitable client and the outside blocks aren't required to support milking herd. I am thinking more where herd size is increasing and labour is an issue.
alps wrote: » Lots of different variables on different years at play on this one. Paid very well this year to shove on cheap milk to young calves and get them weaned. Huge prices paid for these and operators well paid for their time...not sure if in this case MJ added much to the value since weaning but you must remember that on a per hectare basis these calves can leave a significant margin. Again MJ has paid himself, and if he has the time, he may as well pay himself a few bob to be doing something rather than being idle. No commute to a part time job, no inconvenient hours...no simpler way yo put together 2 or 3 grand for a holiday...
Mooooo wrote: » We had an old ai man that used always suggest aubrac to dad. Let us know how the calves turn out up to 6 weeks. I send all mine to bandon if not sold out of yard so colouring would be important in case fellas think they're actually big jerseys or use it as an excuse ha
jaymla627 wrote: » Good to know about dbz have a good few cows incalf to him
mahoney_j wrote: » Outside blocks =winter feed