The offspring of a dairyman that follows in his father’s footstep is as scarce as a second generation Nobel Prize winner, bomb dismanteler or president of North Korea! So it is with pleasure that I congratulate those dairymen who are havin’ a heyday this year.
They, like all farmers and
ranchers, have had ups and downs. I remember 1973-74. I have bad dreams
about it. I was running an animal health/grain mill store in Idaho at a
time when dairymen were beginning to move north from California. Record
high prices for grain and low milk prices sank the milk/feed ration to
1.5. I had heartbreaking conversations with desperate dairymen asking me
for one more load of feed on credit.
In 2009 another national dairy
wreck devastated the industry sinking the index to a 1.6 ration. But
this year, the ratio hit a record 2.55! The price for milk Cooperatives
Working Together (CWT) is twice what it was 10 years ago!
The beef cattle business
recognizes the impact that the dairy business has on cattle prices. Last
year’s president of the National Cattlemen’s Association was a
dairyman!
The crossover began in the
feedlots when they found an expanding market for Holstein steers,
animals whose carcass rarely reaches Choice. Fast food burgers and taco
meat has bolstered the price of the dairy breeds, since half of their
offspring are male and there is a place to go with old cows. In Idaho I
worked for a company that fed potato waste. One of the products was a
slurry that was high in energy but 90 percent moisture. The final ration
was soupy but nutritious. I remember calculating the as-fed consumption
in a pen of 1,000-pound Holstein steers; 119 pound a day!
They were not very popular with
the cowboys. As Dr. Eng said, “It’s hard to be a cowboy when the steers
are following you around!”
1 comment:
Enough of Baxter Black, the new "mouthpiece" for the Angus
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