The 14th annual Dakota Feeder Calf Show is set for Saturday, Oct. 20, in Turtle Lake.
Cattle will be accepted at the Turtle Lake weighing station before 11 a.m., then exhibited as groups of three or four head. The spring-born steer calves consigned to the show then will be fed to market weight at North Dakota State University's Carrington Research Extension Center feedlot.
The NDSU Extension Service is partnering with the Dakota Feeder Calf Show on the show and feedout project to provide cattle producers with an opportunity to experience retaining ownership of cattle beyond the cow-calf phase of production. Producers who consign their calves to the feedout program will receive performance and carcass data.
"When cattle or feed prices are low or high, it's important to know how well your cattle perform through the market chain," says Karl Hoppe, area Extension livestock specialist at the Carrington center. "This cattle feedout project will give producers information on how their calves perform in the feed yard and on the calves' carcass value."
The show and feedout are an entry-level way of learning about these options with three or four calves instead of 100. Cattle producers have used the feeding and carcass information to select bulls that will improve the feedlot value of their calves.
During last year's feedout, the calves gained an average of 725 pounds in 200 days, with a total feeding cost (excluding interest) of 90 cents per pound of gain. The average sale weight was 1,353 pounds. The calves were fed with a market weight breakeven of $85.72 per hundredweight.
"It's the variation among cattle that makes this project educational and a real eye opener," Hoppe says.
In the 2011-12 feedout, the spread in net return per head between the average of the top five herds and average of the bottom five herds was $141.49. The spread becomes more noticeable between the top and bottom herd: The top-profiting herd made $216.14 per head, while the bottom herd lost $5.26 per head. Weight gain per day of age was 3.45 pounds for the top-profiting herd and 3.12 for the bottom herd.
"Small differences in production have a huge impact on profit," Hoppe says.
Feedout project staff will gather data on rate of gain, feeding costs and other characteristics during the trial. After the calves are marketed, the staff will
collect and provide information to the entrants on carcass weight, meat quality and value.
Producers will be assessed an entry fee of $20 per calf. Dakota Feeder Calf Show officials will present awards to producers at the end of the trial.
For more information or to preregister calves, contact Hoppe at (701) 652-2951; Darwin Chesrown, Turtle Lake Farmers Union Oil, at (701) 448-2356; or Irene Graves, McLean County Extension, at (701) 462-8541, ext. 208.
Cattle will be accepted at the Turtle Lake weighing station before 11 a.m., then exhibited as groups of three or four head. The spring-born steer calves consigned to the show then will be fed to market weight at North Dakota State University's Carrington Research Extension Center feedlot.
The NDSU Extension Service is partnering with the Dakota Feeder Calf Show on the show and feedout project to provide cattle producers with an opportunity to experience retaining ownership of cattle beyond the cow-calf phase of production. Producers who consign their calves to the feedout program will receive performance and carcass data.
"When cattle or feed prices are low or high, it's important to know how well your cattle perform through the market chain," says Karl Hoppe, area Extension livestock specialist at the Carrington center. "This cattle feedout project will give producers information on how their calves perform in the feed yard and on the calves' carcass value."
The show and feedout are an entry-level way of learning about these options with three or four calves instead of 100. Cattle producers have used the feeding and carcass information to select bulls that will improve the feedlot value of their calves.
During last year's feedout, the calves gained an average of 725 pounds in 200 days, with a total feeding cost (excluding interest) of 90 cents per pound of gain. The average sale weight was 1,353 pounds. The calves were fed with a market weight breakeven of $85.72 per hundredweight.
"It's the variation among cattle that makes this project educational and a real eye opener," Hoppe says.
In the 2011-12 feedout, the spread in net return per head between the average of the top five herds and average of the bottom five herds was $141.49. The spread becomes more noticeable between the top and bottom herd: The top-profiting herd made $216.14 per head, while the bottom herd lost $5.26 per head. Weight gain per day of age was 3.45 pounds for the top-profiting herd and 3.12 for the bottom herd.
"Small differences in production have a huge impact on profit," Hoppe says.
Feedout project staff will gather data on rate of gain, feeding costs and other characteristics during the trial. After the calves are marketed, the staff will
collect and provide information to the entrants on carcass weight, meat quality and value.
Producers will be assessed an entry fee of $20 per calf. Dakota Feeder Calf Show officials will present awards to producers at the end of the trial.
For more information or to preregister calves, contact Hoppe at (701) 652-2951; Darwin Chesrown, Turtle Lake Farmers Union Oil, at (701) 448-2356; or Irene Graves, McLean County Extension, at (701) 462-8541, ext. 208.
Cattle may be registered the day of the show, but the feedout is limited to 160 head.