Welding Rod wrote: » Bit like your man, I had three red lim bull calves off the cows mid November. Forget the weights, but three good AI bred calves. April born. They were averaging €770. Brought them home and overwintered them. Sold two weeks ago in Ennis. Average €1015. They left me €245 Did it pay me? I figured they did for €90 meal plus a dose. Call it €100. I estimate baled silage at 5 bales per head @ €24 per bale. €120. Total cost €220 per head average. So they netted me €25 per skull! Hardly worth the risk, is it? One vet call out, would have more than zeroed out my margin!!!
Albert Johnson wrote: » I sold 3 yearling bullocks for a neighbour last week, they'd usually be sold as weanlings last November but he was restricted with Tb. All March and April 2020 born and LM bred 450kg €1060 (Black LM and the pick of them) 355kg €900 (Average red LM) 340kg €810 (Middle of the road mousey LM) I thought it the price of them and he was happy with how they averaged. However I was thinking that the 2 first bullocks would hardly have gotten €200 from November and the last 1 wouldn't have gotten much with €100. I'd sell his weanlings the last few year's and it would be rare for him to get less than €700 for a bull weanling and he'd often clich €900 for the pick of them. Let's say they'd probably have averaged near €800 last autumn and take feeding from now until then, they'd have the difference eaten. There's one time to sell suckler weanlings and that's either off the cow or as a store the following autumn imo, over wintering them is a fools game I always think.
Jb1989 wrote: » Very doubful. Grass buyers are buying their quota now.
Hard Knocks wrote: » Would they be any dearer in a few weeks when the grass in in full flight Generally sell in autumn but won’t throw them away either Have seen some that aren’t selling well in Autumn might do better in the spring
Albert Johnson wrote: » If you've place for him over the summer then I wouldn't be afraid of holding him until the autumn. You've the hard work done between rearing and wintering him and he's the sort that should thrive when he gets to grass. Without seeing him in the flesh it's hard to say but he didn't do too bad so far if he's 300kg and I'd be hoping to have him 450kg or more by the autumn. It's a different story if your stuck for space but I'd still consider that a poor price and would have been thinking he's worth €2 a kilo atm.
lab man wrote: » Took 4 to ennis today 3 light bullocks 2 lm 1 ch bullocks and a lm heifer Lm bk 265 kg 750e 8mts Ch 330 990e 9mts A bucket reared calf just to see wat hed make gave 50 euro for him april last year 300kg 490e lmx took him home. 1 lm heifer 265 kg 750 8mts Happy with these prices The bucket lad is leaving prob 250 to 280 profit do ye think twas a mistake taking him home ?
Water John wrote: » These are the organic cattle I decided to offload in Kilmallock yesterday: 521kg Red Lm €1,470 581kg Ch €1,480 503kg Ch €1,340 540kg Black Lm €1,420 535kg Ch €1,170 Last guy looked imperfect, so fine. Very happy, makes room also to set oats. Lad was ploughing yesterday until the rain stopped him. Hopefully get that in this week.
Bass Reeves wrote: » They are 380 as average at 1k average cost + fees and transport. I expect you would get 200 kgs on them over a summer grazing. At that they should be hitting above the 1200 euro.
Cavanjack wrote: » They done well. If the man that bough them sells as stores in the back end he’ll do well to get 1150 for them.
dodo mommy wrote: » Sold a few yearlings bullocks lately 420 Lmx €1050 410 Lmx €1050 375 Lmx €920 385 Lmx €1030 315 Lm €960 They went through early on in the sale. Their seemed to be more of a bit in the trade later in the day. :-(
Bleating Lamb wrote: » He has good clean proofy ground,most of bullocks I bought last year put on over 200kg from April to November and only got a shake of nuts for a fortnight before selling to leave them easy to get in for loading.Were Chx and Limx but werent fancy types,just good straight cattle when bought.Can't remember exactly but they made about 175 euro from buying to selling including vets fees/dosing.
Bass Reeves wrote: » Even less likely to find Continental stores that are hungry as yearlings. Lads have them in sheds feeding them 2-3kgs of ration. At this stage even hungry yearlings fro. Friesians, Hereford's and AA have all moved through the system at this stage usually. It's much easier to pick them up in February. Actually from late January and February you get lads shifting runner's off cows that are 2-300 kgs. These calves are getting too heavy to let under cows so lads shift them on. You buy them at 2.5-3/kg . They are not like Autumn ones which get peunomia easily. Only problem is they do not know an electric fence and it can be a struggle to find them within the parish when they take off
Bleating Lamb wrote: » Would be year olds I will be buying for him.
Albert Johnson wrote: » I'm assuming that the same man is only going to hold them for the 7 month's retention and go back to the ring come November? A bundle of middle of the road FRx type store bullock's in a North West mart coming up to Xmas will sell as well as Aran jumpers in the Sahara. You'd be as well to try and buy a few fair type growthy continental bullock's, try to get 120-180kg on them between now and resale and hopefully they'll gain €150 or more between now and then. The grass will be ate, money turning over and the sub drawn. There's a reason that there's plenty of lad's to buy a CHx bullock of all kinds each spring, they do the business for summer grazer's and although you might not get rich you'll cover all the bases. I'd leave the chancey types and off colour stock to the professionals.
Bass Reeves wrote: » The problem is the only 2 year old hungry stores you have a chance of buying nowadays are Friesians
zetor 4911 wrote: » Noticed that, I would say in fairness to Carnaross they seem to be running a good show. I also noticed that Gortalea have gone to great effort to block the view around the ring.
Bleating Lamb wrote: » Same man wouldn’t have them around the place even if he got them for free!:) It’s only a way of holding a few pound together for him and he’d be happier looking at an animal without right angles on it