Imissmygirls
Lonley for cows
Age at culling has a whole lot to do with general philosophy of farming styles.
Smaller herds can baby their older animals much more and get more productivity out of them. Industrial commercial herds of hundreds and thousands ( yes, thousands) cull much more severely, and don't get me going on that thread!
Personally, I like a conservative approach if I can afford it. We have had to cull 4H animals for breeding problems when i would have LOVED to be able to afford to keep them another year and give them a chance again. I have bred registered cows naturally with whatever breed bull was available JUST to get a calf in them to keep them milking and give them another chance.
Unfortunately, I would think that $$ enters into the picture with backyard herds more often than larger herds. Unless you have unlimited funds or endless pasture, it costs $$ to feed and house an unproductive cow over a long winter.
Old wisdom dictated that a cow only paid for her raising in the first lactation or two. It wasn't until the third lactation that she started making money for you. By the 3rd lactation, she is 4-5 yrs old. You WANT an older cow to make money on her. But, she gets mastitis, the udders falls, her feet start hurting, she starts going cystic, stomach twists, she falls and breaks a leg, the lists goes on and on.
Smaller herds can baby their older animals much more and get more productivity out of them. Industrial commercial herds of hundreds and thousands ( yes, thousands) cull much more severely, and don't get me going on that thread!
Personally, I like a conservative approach if I can afford it. We have had to cull 4H animals for breeding problems when i would have LOVED to be able to afford to keep them another year and give them a chance again. I have bred registered cows naturally with whatever breed bull was available JUST to get a calf in them to keep them milking and give them another chance.
Unfortunately, I would think that $$ enters into the picture with backyard herds more often than larger herds. Unless you have unlimited funds or endless pasture, it costs $$ to feed and house an unproductive cow over a long winter.
Old wisdom dictated that a cow only paid for her raising in the first lactation or two. It wasn't until the third lactation that she started making money for you. By the 3rd lactation, she is 4-5 yrs old. You WANT an older cow to make money on her. But, she gets mastitis, the udders falls, her feet start hurting, she starts going cystic, stomach twists, she falls and breaks a leg, the lists goes on and on.