Bloom....

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OH Breeder

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 14, 2007
Messages
5,954
Location
Ada, Ohio
How do you get the bloom that you see some of the calves have in some of the online sales? I have played with feed rations the past few years. I am happy with my weaning weights but wonder just how to get the calves to be more covered or have that "bloom" to them. I realize some of the cattle may be earlier maturing genetics. We are pretty honest on birth dates but never seem to be big enough in November at the preview/jackpot shows. I am seriously asking a question. Be happy to send anyone my feed ration if they think they can tweek it a little.
 

twistedhshowstock

Well-known member
Joined
May 2, 2011
Messages
758
Location
Nacogdoches, TX
Well I think you hit a couple of things in your post...many of the calves have the bloom because they are the early maturing type, these are the calves that I typically find look great in sales and get a ton of bids, do well at their first few prospect shows and then fall apart because they were pushed to peak to early...also as you mentioned with birth dates, a lot of the calves are a lot older than what the papers say they are, so naturally are gonna look a little more bloomy than a calf that is truly that age...the other thing I see happening is people pooring the feed to these young calves, and even the finisher at this point...personally if I am looking at say a 6 month old calf, I WANT them to be green, because they SHOULD be green at that stage of their life, its only natural...as I said before I think we push to many of these calves to be "backdrop pretty, champion" looking calves from the day they hit the ground, and then they crash before their end point comes because we peaked them to early...there isnt a calf out there that holds their peak, best looking condition for ever and if you push them to look like that to early then they typically dont hold onto it for the big show, at least this is my experience...for the spring shows around here I start pushing my cattle about this time, I think it gets them there and they look good and fresh come show day.
 

PDJ

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 14, 2011
Messages
124
I agree with TSS, many of these calves are pushed to early, and are meant for the jackpot shows.  Not a lot are great as babies and fats.  An exception was the yellow steer Brock May won Kansas City with a few years ago. (2005 or 2006)  Bobby told me that was one of his favorites because he was great as a calf (champion prospect in Denver) and great as a fat.
 
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