kk.man wrote: » Nice money on paper and I am been no way critical but you wouldn't have much change out of 350e in costs looking at those figures. Keeping cattle over the winter no matter what system is expensive. Plus you must factor in your labour. I'm not been the agent of gloom here but you'd want that margin at least.
Bass Reeves wrote: » In genera when feeding ration it takes cattle 12-18 days to get moving on it. Howver with the way weather detrioted the ration would have kept flesh on the. Not sure if I would have fed them ration over the winter weither. From December to end of March is 120 days so they would have eaten 300kgs at a cost of 75 euro. Compensatory growth would have given you part of that weight anyway. With the weight your cattle were at slaughter I guessing your silage was very good anyway. Minerals on top of the silage would have been adequate. Just an an example if these cattle were killed mid july this year at an average weight of 370kgs when the base was 4/4.05 at an average grade of O+3= with Hereford bonus and QA they would have averaged 1520 euro. Even to hold the 2-3 ones that graded 3ish FS would leave you with a better margin especaially if you fed no nuts for the winter.
Bass Reeves wrote: » Bagged minerals I usually buy from Dairygold they have a good general purpose beef mineral at present tvey ha e a 6 for the price of 5 and it works out 15-16/25kg bag. 100 grams/ head forcattle over 500kgs costs 6c/head/day or about 7 euro/ winter.
Cavanjack wrote: » Would you notice the difference in stock leaving sheds that have received the minerals to those that went without. Our silage came in very dry this year (more like hay) and am wondering weather to feed a little with it or not
tatoo wrote: » I winter my lads outside and give them roundbales in circular feeders, would you be for putting a shake of beef mineral on the bales ?
gerryirl wrote: » Are you buying them in or are they your own calves and what type of cattle are they,
gerryirl wrote: » If there good quality and are good weights and the right age I'd load them up now. You could get as much for them now as you will in spring. It's all a chance to know what to do.
squinn2912 wrote: » I agree. If you have space and feeding and can do without the money for a while I'd hang on. Those cubs probably didn't put much on in the last 6 weeks and prices in marts down a bit
larthehar wrote: » squinn2912 wrote: » I agree. If you have space and feeding and can do without the money for a while I'd hang on. Those cubs probably didn't put much on in the last 6 weeks and prices in marts down a bit I.l compromise.. i brought the heaviest to the mart and will see how they go.. the rest i will winter.. should i squeeze or not is the next thing..
larthehar wrote: » I.l compromise.. i brought the heaviest to the mart and will see how they go.. the rest i will winter.. should i squeeze or not is the next thing..
Cavanjack wrote: » If your selling weanlings don't squeeze them. Let the next man worry about that. They'll thrive better all winter for you too.
CloughCasey1 wrote: » They will thrive better alright. But when the AFB (armchair farmer brigade) come out in force after their fill for paddys day will they want to buy yearling bulls for their grass? Would there not be a better market on golden/white/red bullocks?
Cavanjack wrote: » Plenty of non armchair farmers that will want bulls too, they could still be squeezed at that age too.
CHOPS01 wrote: » Could this be fed on a shake of rolled barley.
squinn2912 wrote: » No id put it on the trough along with whatever meal they get
nhg wrote: » How can you be sure each animal gets the correct amount of minerals each day, we give the allsure bolus that way we know that every bullock has had the correct amount.
Who2 wrote: » How do you know they are still working? That they haven't chewed them up and shat them back out? That they didn't throw them up two minutes after you put them in? Do you really believe the bonus will sit there and release a set amount of minerals per day?