LOW Birth Weight Sire Suggestions for First Time Heifer

Help Support Steer Planet:

hmann01

Member
Joined
Dec 17, 2018
Messages
10
Looking for suggestions on LOW birthweight, Calving Ease Sires.

The heifer in question is a FIRST TIMER. She is a purebred Shorthorn. Her registration Number is  *x4269510  .

Her sires side goes back to Jakes Proud Jazz, AshValley breeding as well as a K-Kim bull and a Mona Lisa cow. Her dam side is all over the place with many coming from 4S, along with GKB and Lane's.

We are looking for something that will add depth, bone, hair, and rib shape. As those are something she lacks.
 

Attachments

  • KMG2ygN0-72411630.jpg
    KMG2ygN0-72411630.jpg
    495.6 KB · Views: 209

CRS

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 22, 2012
Messages
470
Location
Ohio
If you can get a hold of it, Winegardner's Dual Threat bull would do all of that.  They make good steers and heifers.  He is an I-80 out of a WDM x ACE.
 

mark tenenbaum

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 23, 2009
Messages
5,765
Location
Virginia Sometimes Iowa and Kansas
Have you gone on SEK and looked at some of the suggested sires from the thread above? There are 5 or 6 proven choices on SEK alone And while you are at it-Look below to the Homeplace Hot Commoditythread below A Shorthorn will change a shorthorn in many more instances than a black one-trust years of experience in that piece of advice Heres a viceo again of Will Lanes Mr Colt that we used on heifers BIG TIME CE BULL-he won some major shows too and comes from very skilled and very honest people O0  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EZzz6gHgR24 O0
 

cpubarn

Well-known member
Joined
May 24, 2007
Messages
674
Location
Sheffield,IA
As a 4H/FFA Dad I never had good luck with any of the so called calving ease shorthorns.  Much better success with an angus.  If I had a heifer today I would try this one... Admittedly I have used his sire, but not him.  I also like the 3ml sexed heifer semen....

https://cattlevisions.com/detail.php?BullId=4239&bulltype=10
 

Lobatomy

Active member
Joined
May 23, 2018
Messages
41
Location
Center, Co
I was thinking of the Red Angus breed to as a suggestion. Griswalds bull Detour worked well for us. He is flawless on CE and those cattle do well from day 1. Well about 40 days out from calving them as two yr olds and udder development looks good. We have a heatwave/ shorthorn heifer we purchased this fall that we will breed to him this spring.
 

hmann01

Member
Joined
Dec 17, 2018
Messages
10
cpubarn do you have pictures of the calves from that sire?

Lobatomy I have considered Red Angus particularly CRSL Navaho but I have not able to find calves out of him or even between the breeds crossed. Do you by chance have any pictures?
 

firesweepranch

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 17, 2010
Messages
1,685
Location
SW MO
Why not try Simmental? You can register the calf as shorthorn and simm. Shell Shocked throws 50 pound calves here, VERY small for us!
https://cattlevisions.com/detail.php?BullId=4099&bulltype=1

His conception is AMAZING! I have 98% conception on my semen on him.
 

hmann01

Member
Joined
Dec 17, 2018
Messages
10
I have considered Simmental but I prefer the red blaze/chrome. I havent been able to find any. I have also considered Shell Shocked but I have bot been able to find pictures of calves from him, or even Simmy×Shorty calves.
 

CRS

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 22, 2012
Messages
470
Location
Ohio
I’d get a hold of Gargan, he owns the Red Revolver bull. He may do exactly what you want. He’ll be honest with you and you can read several of the threads on here too. Semen is pretty available and inexpensive.
 

hmann01

Member
Joined
Dec 17, 2018
Messages
10
Mark do you have pictures of calves? I have also considered him but have only been able to find 3 calves from him. The two pictured on that site and another from a breeder that owns a bull out of him.
 

Mark H

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2008
Messages
645
I am not a Hereford guy so I didn't take any pictures.  I saw the calves when they were calving out a few hundred commercial black Angus heifers bred to his sire UPS Domino, a calving ease Ulrich bull, and Sensation (UPS Domino is his sire). Al the heifers calved easy with few problems.  The Sensation calves had the best confirmation.  The Ulrich sired calves made the best BWF cows or so I was told.
I would call Dale Venhuizen at Churchill cattle company and ask him what would work best on your heifer as he has plenty of bulls in his tank to choose from.
The Ulrichs specialize in calving ease bulls and may have some semen they can send to the U.S. if you call them and ask: http://www.ulrichherefords.com
 

mark tenenbaum

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 23, 2009
Messages
5,765
Location
Virginia Sometimes Iowa and Kansas
cpubarn said:
As a 4H/FFA Dad I never had good luck with any of the so called calving ease shorthorns.  Much better success with an angus.  If I had a heifer today I would try this one... Admittedly I have used his sire, but not him.  I also like the 3ml sexed heifer semen....

https://cattlevisions.com/detail.php?BullId=4239&bulltype=10  Really which ones? and how was the hiefer bred? As a Dhorthorn breeder-Ive been around it 50 years or so have also been around Angus Maines and Simms--gotta know the cattle and people who bred them O0
 

aj

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 5, 2006
Messages
6,420
Location
western kansas
I'm with cpubarn. Just get a live calf on the ground. There are so many Shorthorn bulls out there that have a 100# bwt floating around in their pedigree somewhere. So many projects get ruined by a dead baby calf........and a screwed up heifer with no calf. A dead calf is a throw away calf.
 

Mark H

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 9, 2008
Messages
645
AJ is right. Concentrate pn getting a live, functional calf for any heifer.  Thar said enough calving ease bulls are available in many breeds to allow you to choose a bull that fits you selection criteria, management capabilities and pocket book.  Just don't expect drastic improvement to the degree possible if calving wasn't the driving issue.
A couple things to keep in mind:
Just picking a bull by breed is not adequate.  Plenty of high birth weight Angus bulls exist that should never be bred to a heifer.
Also some breeds like the ed Angus have a mean birth weight EPD for bull of around -1.2 LB meaning for a bull to be easy calving he would have to be in the -4 or less range for Red Angus.
 

Lucky_P

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 27, 2012
Messages
326
We're principally a Simmental outfit, and there are plenty of calving ease bulls in the breed, but have bred some Shorthorn  over the past 10 years or so. 
Have used Waukaru Goldmine 2109 enough that I'd use him on a well-grown heifer of ANY breed without any concern. Calves come early (avg 271 days), slender, and easy.
 

coyote

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 15, 2007
Messages
499
Here is a a real good Shorthorn calving ease, heifer bull, Muridale Buster 2nd 76P. We bred him to over 150 heifers over the years and he worked real well. You can get semen at Cattle Visions.
 

Attachments

  • 024 (2).JPG
    024 (2).JPG
    92.1 KB · Views: 275

vc

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 24, 2007
Messages
1,811
Location
So-Cal
I bred my 2nd calf heifer to Exar tyron (she lost her first calf out of another Angus calving ease bull (not) it was close to 100 pounds). The Tyron calf came easy, must have been all of 60 pounds, she was a tiny little thing but now at 9 months is pushing 800 pounds, balanced and very feminine. I would use him on again on heifers. 
 
Top