DustyBoot
Loving the herd life
Me again! I'll start with a recap of our situation: we have just under 14 acres of mixed grass and wooded area in central Texas (Georgetown/Taylor area). We're looking at keeping a few goats and a few cows to make the best use of the land we have.
I talked with the county extension agent yesterday and he said it sounds like we have some good ideas. As far as cattle, he suggested a couple of options.
1) Get two Dexter cows with the intent of selling their calves at 6 to 8 months for show/breeding/whatever, as keeping them for 12 to 14 months would likely be a bit of a strain for our land depending on what kind of year we're having.
2) Buy 3 to 5 stocker calves coming up from south Texas each year, let them graze for 3-4 months, then sell them and let the pastures recover.
Can anyone give me some thoughts on what those two options look like in reality? I'm wondering how hard it would be to market Dexter calves at that age, how hard it would be to pick up good stocker calves, where we're likely to find the best profit, etc. Because we're on a relatively small property and not all of it is going to be great for cows, we're trying to make the most of things without overdoing it.
I talked with the county extension agent yesterday and he said it sounds like we have some good ideas. As far as cattle, he suggested a couple of options.
1) Get two Dexter cows with the intent of selling their calves at 6 to 8 months for show/breeding/whatever, as keeping them for 12 to 14 months would likely be a bit of a strain for our land depending on what kind of year we're having.
2) Buy 3 to 5 stocker calves coming up from south Texas each year, let them graze for 3-4 months, then sell them and let the pastures recover.
Can anyone give me some thoughts on what those two options look like in reality? I'm wondering how hard it would be to market Dexter calves at that age, how hard it would be to pick up good stocker calves, where we're likely to find the best profit, etc. Because we're on a relatively small property and not all of it is going to be great for cows, we're trying to make the most of things without overdoing it.