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      <title>Attachment is not always good!</title>
      <link>https://www.pinetreeacresar.com/attachment-is-not-always-good</link>
      <description>Having raised Beefmasters for over 40 years, one of the biggest mistakes a cattleman or cattlewoman can make is to become too attached to any one of the animals in your herd. It is easy</description>
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           Mama and her new baby!
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           Having raised Beefmasters for over 40 years, one of the biggest mistakes a cattleman or cattlewoman can make is to become too attached to any one of the animals in your herd. It is easy to become so attached to a specific cow in your herd because she is the color you like, she has a great disposition, or she has been with you so long there is just no way you can part with her.  As responsible breeders of cattle, it is paramount for our herd to continue to improve itself year after year. When we become too "attached" we become too forgiving and we allow animals to remain in our herd that are taking us in the wrong direction. For example, you have owned a specific cow for several years and she always delivers a calf every year. You have noticed that her calf always weans out with less pounds than most of the other calves in your herd. But..... she has that beautiful color that you like and you are going to let her slide on milk production because you can just feed a little more creep to her calf to improve the poundage at weaning?????  Take a second look, this is an example of becoming too attached. This cow needs to be culled and you know it, especially if you want your herd to move forward in this breed.  Our founder, Mr Tom Lasater, was a stickler on culling cattle that did not exude the six essentials of our breed. He was so intense with not becoming attached, that if a cow allowed a coyote to get her calf, she was a "goner" from his herd. There are so many variables as cattle raisers that we have to be cognizant of daily.  We have to watch for teat size, milking ability, chronic foot problems, and now more than ever we need to strive to raise animals with great EPD"s.  EPD's are a predictive measure one can use to improve their herds exponentially!! When purchasing a bull or choosing one to purchase semen, demand great EPD's.  Don't get attached to the color, the way he walks, or anything else.  If he does not have the EPD's desired for our breed, don't use him. Using a bull with the right EPD's can improve your herd in very short time!  Back to the females.  How many times do we decide to give a cow a second chance if she is not able to deliver her calf without assistance. Quite often, if we are honest.  We wait another year, a loss of income for a year, when we could replace this cow with one that has been scored for calving ease.  It truly is possible to reduce birthing problems in cattle to a very low +percentage by two measures - Bulls with EPD's that predict low birth weight in calves, and purchasing or retaining heifers in your herd that have had their reproductive tracts scored!!  It is a great day when the vet comes to score your 12 month old heifers and you have 100% with scores that are 12 to 15 inches.  It is a sad day when that one heifer you like the most scores a 7 and you have to make the decision to send her to slaughter. But, that is the way it is in this business.  Calving problems cost us more dollars than we want to think about and this practice of scoring, in this old breeder's mind, is one of the best things we can to do to save ourselves heartache, valuable time, and dollars, after all we are all in to make money, right?  if one of your cows that you are so attached to, starts having enlarged teats at a later age, that requires your assistance to help the calf get milk, what should you do.  Once the calf gets started, let her stay, and keep the beautiful heifer that is on her now?  If you do, you are too attached,  A wise cattleman will not only cull this cow and calf, but he or she will look through the herd to find any more offspring from this cow, and take them all to the auction and send their papers to BBU to be cancelled. Well, enough for this Blog, hope you enjoy it and as always I appreciate and invite you to comment and give me your opinions.  Love this Beefmaster Breed! 
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      <pubDate>Tue, 04 Feb 2020 08:13:18 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>The Beefmaster Replacement Heifer</title>
      <link>https://www.pinetreeacresar.com/the-beefmaster-replacement-heifer</link>
      <description>The Beefmaster Replacement Heifer is one that a breeder has determined has the qualities needed to compete within his or her herd. At Pine Tree Acres we major on the color red with a few</description>
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           Choose Replacement Heifers that enhance your herd and can be immediately marketable!
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            The Beefmaster Replacement Heifer is one that a breeder has determined has the qualities needed to compete within his or her herd. At Pine Tree Acres we major on the color red with a few mottled face and paints sprinkled in.  Each breeder has to decide the markets they want to solicit and when this decision is made, it is a matter of choosing replacement heifers that will fit into your markets.  Quality, in my opinion is of utmost importance.  We are a small breeder and each year at Pine Tree Acres we attempt to add at least 10 new replacement heifers so that our herd is maintained at the level we have determined maximizes the land and resources we are blessed to use.  This year, we have 10 heifers in a development program that will be bred using artificial insemination when they are 15 months old and followed up with clean up with one of our herd bulls - Polled Performer, Polled Vision, or L Bar Enfuego.  We attempt to study the pedigrees of each heifer and match them up with an AI Sire or one of our own bulls that we feel will compliment the herd with another offspring subject to our own replacement or placing in a BBU approved sale. I included a replacement paint heifer in this article because we feel at PTA this heifer not only has style, muscle, straight back, and bone, but with the correct pairing she will produce offspring that will be marketable. We have always done weights and measurements, but now we are having all of our heifers scored to make certain they should be able to calve with ease and will be adding other scoring and measurements in the near future so that we can better predict for our markets the kind of animal they can expect when purchasing from PTA. 
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      <pubDate>Fri, 04 Feb 2000 08:16:26 GMT</pubDate>
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