Top 5 thickest shorthorn bulls available.

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mark tenenbaum

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wiseguy said:
E6 Durhams said:
Medium Rare said:
According to the RFD program, all the calves in the sire tests, 250ish, have came unassisted and so far 80% graded choice or higher. Some of the bulls that have been entered carry some thickness, might be worth browsing the results to pick one out E6.

Last I looked, it cost a pretty penny to “nominate” a bull for the test. I could be wrong this year but if the ASA is going to have a sire test, why does it cost the producer so much dinero? Why not let any breeder who thinks they have a bull worthy submit a cane of semen? Why charge a fee? Have an initial proposal put out by the ASA asking for bulls. After everybody has submitted a bull/ bulls, have a vote by the whole memebership via a online survey to make sure the breed is fully represented by the samples. Don’t make money be the variable as to whether a bull is worthy of the test. Let peer reviewed decide. Why limit it with exaborant fees? The breed needs all the help it can get, not some arbitrary fee so the ASA and U of I can collect the cash.

10 bulls in the latest round of sire test. That’s ridiculous. I hope Monte reads SP. or whoever is in charge of that test.

Brock,
I was responsible for getting the ASA sire test program going. When I was chair of the Shorthorn plus committee I approached the U of I after Simmental and Charolais had done similar tests. I think it would be rude to discuss actual numbers, but lets just agree it was more than 20k and less than 50k for the U of I to let us participate. If you would have attended the sire test field day one of the things Matt discussed was the value of the test in actual dollars. I nominated my bull Imperative. He had 16 calves. For my $2,000 dollars I paid someone to collect all the performance data, DNA genotype the calves, collect data from the grow safe system, (which I don't have) and compare them to 14 other sires within the breed. So it cost me $125 a head. I am very comfortable with that. There is nowhere else that this is being done. Period. Compared to the Waukaru, Lovings, Jungels, Leveldale, etc I am a little fish in a big pond. I calve 25-30 cows a year. Last I checked they are all over 100. But I still feel like I have one of the best bulls in the breed, and it was time to prove it.

The ASA can't just drop that kind of money on a sire test. Heck that is a persons salary at the association. As breeders we have to "put up or shut up!" I wish our association could afford to offer this service, but they can't.  If you disagree with me that's fine. No hard feelings. It's a big cost. I just think it was worth it.//// -You would do fine if you could market that quality of beef after the fact somehow excluding by products-and be involved in something positive for your business and the breed O0
 

wiseguy

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E6 Durhams said:
wiseguy said:
E6 Durhams said:
Medium Rare said:
According to the RFD program, all the calves in the sire tests, 250ish, have came unassisted and so far 80% graded choice or higher. Some of the bulls that have been entered carry some thickness, might be worth browsing the results to pick one out E6.

Last I looked, it cost a pretty penny to “nominate” a bull for the test. I could be wrong this year but if the ASA is going to have a sire test, why does it cost the producer so much dinero? Why not let any breeder who thinks they have a bull worthy submit a cane of semen? Why charge a fee? Have an initial proposal put out by the ASA asking for bulls. After everybody has submitted a bull/ bulls, have a vote by the whole memebership via a online survey to make sure the breed is fully represented by the samples. Don’t make money be the variable as to whether a bull is worthy of the test. Let peer reviewed decide. Why limit it with exaborant fees? The breed needs all the help it can get, not some arbitrary fee so the ASA and U of I can collect the cash.

10 bulls in the latest round of sire test. That’s ridiculous. I hope Monte reads SP. or whoever is in charge of that test.

Brock,
I was responsible for getting the ASA sire test program going. When I was chair of the Shorthorn plus committee I approached the U of I after Simmental and Charolais had done similar tests. I think it would be rude to discuss actual numbers, but lets just agree it was more than 20k and less than 50k for the U of I to let us participate. If you would have attended the sire test field day one of the things Matt discussed was the value of the test in actual dollars. I nominated my bull Imperative. He had 16 calves. For my $2,000 dollars I paid someone to collect all the performance data, DNA genotype the calves, collect data from the grow safe system, (which I don't have) and compare them to 14 other sires within the breed. So it cost me $125 a head. I am very comfortable with that. There is nowhere else that this is being done. Period. Compared to the Waukaru, Lovings, Jungels, Leveldale, etc I am a little fish in a big pond. I calve 25-30 cows a year. Last I checked they are all over 100. But I still feel like I have one of the best bulls in the breed, and it was time to prove it.

The ASA can't just drop that kind of money on a sire test. Heck that is a persons salary at the association. As breeders we have to "put up or shut up!" I wish our association could afford to offer this service, but they can't.  If you disagree with me that's fine. No hard feelings. It's a big cost. I just think it was worth it.

Great points by you and medium rare. Does the U of I give a break down for the reasons for the costs? I’m sure the grow safe feeders were not cheap. But for the money they charge it would seem to me a good business venture to create a similar test station. I appreciate all the effort put into it, I just couldn’t get my head around the costs. 14 bulls at 2k a bull is 28k. Who got the money when the calves were sold?


The cost was based on cows inseminated. Not on the number of live calves. U of I came up with this cost. I never received a break down. The cattle belong to the university, and receive all profits/ losses.

If Shorthorns don't utilize this opportunity other breeds are waiting in line to take our spot. At the same cost. The ASA did cover several expenses not associated with the U of I charge. Matt Woolfolk has a presentation about it. Email him. I bet he would send it to you.

When was the last time 150 head of shorthorn sired calves had complete performance, intake, and kill data in one group......?

I know people beat up on the ASA for WHR costs, TOC memberships, money spent on Jr. Nationals, not having a field rep, etc. Call your board of directors and make your opinions known.
 

RyanChandler

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But somehow the association will find the money to send a fleet of nva employees to the world Shorthorn Congress or whatever it’s called this year in Australia— but no money for print advertisement, no money for bull test, no money for anything of any value.  The reason dollar amounts can’t be disclosed is because the ASA profited off this venture. 
 

mbigelow

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Another thick bull was greenridge courier.

How much does it cost to produce a calf from conception to weaning. Then add the cost from weaning to harvest.  What does it cost to AI a cow, calving labor, weaning processing labor, feeding labor, harvesting labor and data collection.  What would this cost you if you tried to do it yourself.  I think it's a good deal if conception rates are at or above 75%.
 

mark tenenbaum

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Years ago I bought K Kim Pleasure pass embryos on a red Dunbeacon Venture daughter of the really good margie you had at Denver,maybe 2003 or something.-She might have been sired by the Primetime bull you had from Bucholtz. The people who bought her from you were from Colorado. Things went South and I never picked them up-I always wondered how that would have turned out. I heard he moderated them and was deep bodied O0
 

Hopster1000

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knabe said:
https://shorthorn.org/university-of-illinois-sire-test/


extremely difficult to find much on the university of illinois websites.


web pages are not updated with recent data and you have to click through to find the updates.


not sure where to find what programs are, where the bull test is at which school


all in all, pretty sad websites

Would this be a starting point?

https://shorthorn.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Sire-Test-Update-Matt-April-2018.pdf
 

RyanChandler

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mbigelow said:
Another thick bull was greenridge courier.

How much does it cost to produce a calf from conception to weaning. Then add the cost from weaning to harvest.  What does it cost to AI a cow, calving labor, weaning processing labor, feeding labor, harvesting labor and data collection.  What would this cost you if you tried to do it yourself.  I think it's a good deal if conception rates are at or above 75%.

The data collection is the only cost you mention that should be absorbed by the ASA and it’s members.  The other cost should be assumed by whoever is profiting off the actual animal carcass. 

My contention is no so much the cost as it is the ASAs lack of prioritizing the value of the test by choosing not to contribute any funds towards it.
 

RyanChandler

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Idk about cash flow but their total revenue isn’t too shabby.    When there’s enough revenue to expand the service side to include titles such as show director and youth activities director,  then there’s gotta be enough to fund ventures such as the Illinois sire test.    When there’s enough revenue to warrant funding for a brick-and-mortar establishment, one whose door has never had a single dollar walk through it, then there’s enough to invest in the sire test.  When there’s enough revenue to send the executive secretary and a fleet of other people to South America to a conference that doesn’t generate one red cent for the association or it’s members,  well then, you get the point...  The association has plenty of money to work with- rather it’s the disgraceful misallocation of revenue that hamstrings actual useful investments such as the sire test. 
 

RyanChandler

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It goes back to “what is the operative function of the association.”  The current allocation is like a school district saying they don’t have the funds for a math teacher, but then going out and spending more than the equivalent on a luncheon, for a handful of employees. 
 

mark tenenbaum

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Hopster1000 said:
knabe said:
https://shorthorn.org/university-of-illinois-sire-test/


extremely difficult to find much on the university of illinois websites.


web pages are not updated with recent data and you have to click through to find the updates.


not sure where to find what programs are, where the bull test is at which school


all in all, pretty sad websites

Would this be a starting point?//// YES IT WOULD GOOD SHOW-LIST OF ALL THE BULLS INVOLVED

https://shorthorn.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Sire-Test-Update-Matt-April-2018.pdf
 

SEA

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Double Vision.  True, he is Clubby and THC!  (I can not remember his PHA status?).  But THICK!  And that was the criteria of the original post.
 

mark tenenbaum

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SEA said:
Double Vision.  True, he is Clubby and THC!  (I can not remember his PHA status?).  But THICK!  And that was the criteria of the original post.??? No it wasnt- they were just kidding-it has been revamped to commercially oreiented cattle only and even some pigs LOL-Vision was: th, pha. but DS clean-and like: Double Stuff. Steermaker, and Proud Jazz, (or a couple sons like Capiche) was used on more types of cattle then any Shorthorns available  O0
 

trevorgreycattleco

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mark tenenbaum said:
SEA said:
Double Vision.  True, he is Clubby and THC!  (I can not remember his PHA status?).  But THICK!  And that was the criteria of the original post.??? No it wasnt- they were just kidding-it has been revamped to commercially oreiented cattle only and even some pigs LOL-Vision was: th, pha. but DS clean-and like: Double Stuff. Steermaker, and Proud Jazz, (or a couple sons like Capiche) was used on more types of cattle then any Shorthorns available  O0


Jesus man. Would you just stop. I was just kidding? You’re high. If you don’t have anything positive to contribute then just move along. It was a legit question. Obviously you’re still sour.

I’ve been having private conversations. I’m not required to keep you posted on what I’m doing.

This thread has been super useful for me so far. Chill out homie  O0
 

mark tenenbaum

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I"m not sour at all: nor am I high:which is a childish cliche at best  Threads evolve than dissolve-This deal has covered a number of other topics and this guy was just adding an opinion-and I added my opinion: based  upon semen sales from the US purebred deals-to the commercial deals that had not had a viable Shorthorn on offer for years People arent drunk or stoned just because they dont take the same direction you do in every sentence-As far as sour-the tamtrums and histrionics EXLAX has been directing at just about anybody: especially JIT might deserve a little of your attention. Posting gory pictures of dead calves etc to try and maintain some sort of upperhand or whatever is not only juvenile-its down right distastefull. And yeah yeah-we've all dealt with these kinds of things-You arent the only people in the world who have ever been around cattle. O0
 

RyanChandler

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Histrionic. Damn mark- reaching deep tonight.  Impressive. 

But  ‘distasteful?’  Hahaha mufuker please-  the swindler who sells these type bulls as viable commercial options is the distasteful one.  Im merely showing the results of our encounter in an attempt to provide some context to his outlandish, utter bs claims.  Substantiating mine by disputing his.

Here’s one I got out alive, 143 lbs. Pulled him in a creek bottom with a come along. Made my 120lb fiancé look like a small child. 
 

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mark tenenbaum

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You have no proof of intent other than your bleets about a deal to buy a bull where you claim you were misled-A swindler takes consideration and does not deliver the product as agreed-You made a decision based upon your knowledge and experience that this bull might work-you paid for a bull per a contract-it was delivered-Were there warranties and or guarantees clearly laid out in your agreement as to the range of calving weights by the bull and based upon the sellers full acknowledgement of the type pf cows you were going to use him on? Expected progeny differences are just that.So there are no absolutes-and as such-there are no reliances strong enough to justify cause per se- against either the owner of the bull or the owner of the cow in the case of a huge BW  Unless warranted in writing. Who struck John Dont Count: and only God knows the outcome of future births. Did every calf on your place out of that bull come as a monster? YOUR TURN TO TELL THE TRUTH And did the females involved with the big BWS  share ANY of the same breeding? YO GOOBER-LOOKS TO ME LIKE YOU DUPED YOSELF MOFO-But big tough Cowboyzzz dont cry and fuss-they move onto the next rodeo  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=THquGPFx5YU O0
 
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