Sunday, January 3, 2010

Beef Cows For Sale ANGUS BEEF HEIFER CALF?

ANGUS BEEF HEIFER CALF? - beef cows for sale

I have purchased before, the meat of Angus beef calf. I will raise it about a year and then in a barn sale. I intend to spend up to $ 100 - $ 200. Where am I going to buy decent calves. in asking how do I do if I do that. in 13th and hope to start a company of this kind .. by. with the help of my father (a farmer born ...) I think I can raise a good cow.

3 comments:

Ann B said...

It is more than the original cost of the calf to offer.
I suppose you want to buy and their descendants, and a bottle raised it - unless you have a milk / cow premium, you will need in the milk replacer and calf starter figure. 50 # substitute milk for the calf is 7 weeks of age or younger. Meanwhile, the calf is also consumed at least 50 # of Calf Starter, and probably more. After the calf is weaned, it is still too young to survive on the grass / hay, so it should be fed 2% body weight ration per day from a good producer of veal, and access to pasture, or 1% their body weight in hay per day.

There is much work to do in raising bottle calves. If you through all this, why not the heifers? Start your own herd, or when Dad work together to make a bull sold after they are confirmed in the race.
Multiple entries in a breed cow, and you need the following before the last calf is ready to go, but you make more profit in a heifer bred by youonce a year (in most cases)

Ann B said...

It is more than the original cost of the calf to offer.
I suppose you want to buy and their descendants, and a bottle raised it - unless you have a milk / cow premium, you will need in the milk replacer and calf starter figure. 50 # substitute milk for the calf is 7 weeks of age or younger. Meanwhile, the calf is also consumed at least 50 # of Calf Starter, and probably more. After the calf is weaned, it is still too young to survive on the grass / hay, so it should be fed 2% body weight ration per day from a good producer of veal, and access to pasture, or 1% their body weight in hay per day.

There is much work to do in raising bottle calves. If you through all this, why not the heifers? Start your own herd, or when Dad work together to make a bull sold after they are confirmed in the race.
Multiple entries in a breed cow, and you need the following before the last calf is ready to go, but you make more profit in a heifer bred by youonce a year (in most cases)

Ann B said...

It is more than the original cost of the calf to offer.
I suppose you want to buy and their descendants, and a bottle raised it - unless you have a milk / cow premium, you will need in the milk replacer and calf starter figure. 50 # substitute milk for the calf is 7 weeks of age or younger. Meanwhile, the calf is also consumed at least 50 # of Calf Starter, and probably more. After the calf is weaned, it is still too young to survive on the grass / hay, so it should be fed 2% body weight ration per day from a good producer of veal, and access to pasture, or 1% their body weight in hay per day.

There is much work to do in raising bottle calves. If you through all this, why not the heifers? Start your own herd, or when Dad work together to make a bull sold after they are confirmed in the race.
Multiple entries in a breed cow, and you need the following before the last calf is ready to go, but you make more profit in a heifer bred by youonce a year (in most cases)

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