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Jangus Genetics
United States
Приєднався 24 вер 2021
Raising Registered Angus Cattle, Hair Sheep, and more in a regenerative and profitable way. Follow us for more
Відео
Perimeter Fence on Leased Farms
Переглядів 9721 годину тому
The short answer is always it depends. We like to use what is available, fast, easy, pocketbook friendly, but most importantly reliable. Tight but not cheap is the key here. Also this is not legal advice check your local laws and regulations for your area.
The Bulls are Ready but I’m NOT!
Переглядів 10614 днів тому
We like to turn our bulls out around the first of December for September calves. As a seed stock producer we experience keeping young bulls together and as our herd size grows we gain more experience managing mature bulls. A very hot Hotwire helps to keep them where we want them and we have gentle bulls that respect us but they can have a bad day and must be respected as well. Cody shares his e...
Farm Relationships Build Them Now Or Regret It Later
Переглядів 99Місяць тому
Farm Relationships Build Them Now Or Regret It Later
Learning Stockmanship Through Patience
Переглядів 38Місяць тому
Learning Stockmanship Through Patience
How to pick a Maternal Bull and Fall 24 Sale Bulls
Переглядів 8972 місяці тому
How to pick a Maternal Bull and Fall 24 Sale Bulls
Bull Gentleness for Small to Medium Farms.
Переглядів 4542 місяці тому
Bull Gentleness for Small to Medium Farms.
Calving Season Fall 2024. I broke out the bottle.
Переглядів 962 місяці тому
Calving Season Fall 2024. I broke out the bottle.
Put it in writing! Handshake Contracts are not Enough.
Переглядів 1674 місяці тому
Put it in writing! Handshake Contracts are not Enough.
Grass Finished Beef Available Spring 2024
Переглядів 726 місяців тому
Grass Finished Beef Available Spring 2024
Tips and Tricks for rotating Cows with Calves
Переглядів 3347 місяців тому
Tips and Tricks for rotating Cows with Calves
Managing Fescue for Year Long Grazing
Переглядів 3057 місяців тому
Managing Fescue for Year Long Grazing
Follow Your Spring Grazing Principles
Переглядів 2247 місяців тому
Follow Your Spring Grazing Principles
Farmer CEO Targets and Farm Business Structure
Переглядів 4108 місяців тому
Farmer CEO Targets and Farm Business Structure
Moving Cows with Calves and Training
Переглядів 2028 місяців тому
Moving Cows with Calves and Training
Dirt To Soil A Book Review and Recommendation #regenerativeagriculture #livestockfarming
Переглядів 829 місяців тому
Dirt To Soil A Book Review and Recommendation #regenerativeagriculture #livestockfarming
Great video, I am literally watching this video in the truck with a 14 month old heifer in the trailer after chasing her away from a bull for two hours. Nice to hear other people‘s perspectives.
Thanks for the comment. Everyone has different opinions but we all have to figure out what works for us.
Thank you ❤
Appreciate it. Let me know if you have any questions.
Happy Thanksgiving, brother🇲🇽🇺🇸🫡
Happy Thanksgiving! I’m thankful for the views.
Have you found Johann Zietaman's WhatsApp group chat yet?
I have heard about it but am not on it. Is it still available to the public?
@JangusGenetics you need to be invited. We did a quick calculation today on the number of countries represented in his chat group. Amazingly well over 40.
That’s awesome
I’ve been reading his book. I’m curious to see if his methods work in arid West Texas on predominantly warm season. If he’s right and you can increase the quantity and quality of stockpiled forage and try to keep these warm seasons from being so rank during the winter, that would be a game changer.
The book was well worth the read. My experience this summer about 15-20% of the available forage was heading out every time we entered this paddock. Good for the cows and the bees both. The main thing for me is keeping the forage palatable and abundant. Good luck.
THE GRASS LOOKS GOOD. MAYBE YOU SAID IT BUT WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME THEY WERE IN THAT PADDOCK.
It had a shorter graze August 16 with the custom grazed heifers working their way back to the load out facilities.
What do you use a perimeter fence?
It depends. I usually fix the pre existing fence on rented property and add an inside Hotwire if needed. For cows if I start from scratch hi tensile Hotwire with an ac charger for long term use. If crops or other cattle are running on other side of fence I may beef that up and include a dead space so cattle cannot get nose to nose and if Hotwire fails cows have a second barrier between them and crops. For cows I don’t mind barbed wire with sheep on my home farm I’m planning to go 6 wires hi tensile with timeless posts or woven wire barb on top and hi tensile hot on the inside to keep them from rubbing.
Informative video! I raise half dozen beef bottle calves in MO every year. Would like to maybe switch to feeders but they are high and I’m limited with 14 acres. Trying to learn more and mitigate my risk before buying feeders.
Thanks for the comment. Have you thought about trying some sheep on your 14 acres? I wouldn’t turn you away from cows or feeders but you can get a lot more pounds produced per acre with sheep. Would also be a good amount for finishing a few beeves if you can direct market them. Lots of opportunity. Let me know if you have any specific questions I can answer. I have not purchased feeders to background but we retain almost all of our calves and turn them into breeding stock, grass finished beef, or finished beeves. It’s hard to take a few calves to the sale barn and make a good profit but it can be done. Also can pair up with others and put together a trailer load. Check out the books “thoughts and advice from an old cattle man” by Gordon Hazard, and also “pasture profits with stocker cattle” by Allan Nation. I have videos about them also. Good luck!
Google Wolki farm Australia and TT Ball South Africa
I’ll check them out. It’s always interesting to see what other environments and breeds can accomplish. Good reason for cross breeding.
Nguni can calf at 17 months and calf till they are 20 years old
We have some Angus that will do that but are working to make a lot more. I prefer my cows to wait until 24 months seems like they have a harder time getting bred back the 3rd time odly enough.
The cow in the background is my spirit animal when I be eating noodles.
She is a funny one.
Put nguni bulls to your heifers early matured ,small frame low input ,will flourish where other cattle cannot survive
I have heard they are a good breed.
Hey man! Just starting to watch your stuff. Question: If you're focusing on fertility as one of the key traits in your herd, how does AI play a role for you in the future? Seems like a contradiction?
My plan is to eventually AI some of my proven cows. Then keep the heifers out of those cows and when they are proven keep some bulls out of them. I think the reasons to bring in an outside bull are 1. You are too small to keep up your genetic diversity within your own herd, 2. You feed like you need an outside influence to do something you don’t feel your herd can do alone. The hard part is finding bulls to AI to that are from a program that is as challenging as your own. At this point I still see some programs out there that have cows I think could have a potential positive impact on my program. I’m not saying it’s necessary but it could get me where I want to go faster.
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Thank you for posting videos and taking the time to record. Im in the early learning stages and enjoy hearing multiple perspectives on grazing and the animals. The little details on your past experiences help a lot!
Thank you for the comment. I’m glad my experiences are helping. Let me know if you have any questions or specific video ideas you would like to see.
Yes, pretty cool.
Thank you.
Thank you for taking the time to educate us about these impressie animals, it is lovely to see them in their surroundings behaing as they do. I rarely see bulls here in the UK now, only breeders tend to have a stock bull. the majority use straws or may bring in a sire for a couple of weeks. When I was 5 years old, I rremember the old Hereford bull coming down to work in the field adjacent to my house. I would sit on the bunker for hours waiting for him to walk the perimeter of the field until he got to me and would stop for a fuss (yes I did scratch his forehead, rub his neck, but his preference was to suck my hand- salt no doubt) . Years later, I would check on a field of bullocks 3 times a day - yes the young ones pactise their 'fighting skills' as play at that point - upending people was the favourite, or mock charging at you. Like your cattle, they have personalities, some want a fuss, some keep distance and some make the boundaries more than clear. The one thing that I have seen in some videos, is farmers not being aware when they kick up 'dust' or debris while they are in proximity to a bull. They may be recording while using a mower/ strimmer/ biower, kicking the ground to show viewers how dry the soil is or throwing hay on a pile. To me, a cloud of dust challenges a bull as they kick up dust when they scratch the ground in a challenge., yet most are oblivioux to the change in the animal's humour.
Always interesting to hear tales from across the pond. I am surprised artificial insemination is not more popular in Missouri among our smaller producers. My experience with it was a poor conception rate on heifers and the next year I spent the AI amount on a better bull. Most of the customers my family works with have herds of 10-30 and so a bull is easier to leave with the herd than the labor of getting all the cows up a few times to AI. I had not thought about dust kicking as a challenge but I’m sure you are correct. A lot of people are not as aware of the animals attitude as they could be but it’s mostly that we don’t have as much time to learn about them as generations past. Thanks for your input. Glad you have an interest in Livestock. Animals make life better in my opinion.
It can get overwhelming when all the cows are coming up for cubes. Especially when they get into a pushing match and you’re in the middle with a bag of cubes.
Yes and dangerous if you lose your footing. It makes them easy to get into a lot or work them though. Have fun and stay upright! Thanks for the comment.
Thanks again for another good video. I agree with your comments I like a bull to stay calm when your around them don't have to pet them. I see my cattle almost everyday walk through them to keep use to me.
I appreciate the feedback. Gentle cattle make life more fun.
@@JangusGenetics yes sure does.
👍
Where are you farm.
Missouri, USA
VG.
Thank you
Good video check the EPDS on those bulls look good wish I could finds bulls like that near here weighing and yearly weights # around here to high
It’s a balance. I feel we have to take the whole picture into consideration and our environment has natural limits before supplements are required. Good luck k in your search. There are good cattle around.
They are both good looking bulls.
Thank you.
Nothing in the world wrong with these two bulls. I Wouldn't mind seeing a video with that 15 month old bull crop you said you had coming up.
Thanks for the feedback. I’ll get some videos of the young bulls up soon.
ProTip of TheDay: No-till 25lb Korean Lespedeza w/ 25lb of 0-7-0 Granulated Rock Phosphate in the same furrow (real shallow, like 1/4") late February or early March on some of your fescue fields. Be sure to get the first flush of grass off before memorial day (graze hard or preferably bale it) so the legume can pop with the heat. Do Not Fertilize w/ Nitrogen! Graze or bale that Lespedeza, but be off it by the first week of August until the first hard freeze to accomplish 2 things: allow the Lespedeza to reseed and let the fescue stockpile. Send me a compact, straight-backed bull if that works the miracles I know it will ;)
A lot of folks used to frost seed in red clover about that time. Sounds like it should help grow some good protein. Grandpa loves his Korean Lespedeza.
Good video!
Thanks!
Well, now dangit you might have made me change my mind about some of that a little bit.
Happy to help encourage some thinking on the subject. Good luck in your operation.
Can the heifers father breed his own daughter.? When you said one of the heifers is this bulls daughter?
The fall calving cows should be bred. The big bull is just “cleaning up” anything that comes open for some reason. It’s not ideal to breed father daughter. I am comfortable breeding up to 50%relations so half brother to half sister. I think most operations that line breed closely say 30% or less related is ideal. My plan for the next few years is to keep a bull for one year and then sell them. That will keep me from becoming too closely related to anything. Once I get the consistency I’m looking for I will bring in some outcross genetics through artificial insemination on my proven cows. I want to make sure that anything I bring in can perform on fescue and meets or exceeds the standards I’m setting for my herd. Side note the old standard for proving a bull was genetic defect free was to breed him to 30 of his daughters. If the calves turned out ok the bull was “proven” genetic defect free. I have not intentionally bred father to daughter but the few that we have had on clean up have been fine.
Loved your review of this book. Just went to that website and bought two copies. Thank you very much. Subscribing to your site. You certainly are a gifted speaker. Continued success!!
Glad to hear the review helped. Thank you for the comment and the support.
I really enjoyed this book. The few videos I’ve found of him on UA-cam are great too. His son Mark, who wrote a chapter in the book about how the bank sees cattle loans, has a VERY insightful video on UA-cam as well. He was funny too.
I’m glad the book went back in production. I enjoyed the videos before it went back into print. They are a wealth of knowledge.
Thanks for the video. The description of your person experience was great. I would be good to go into the content of the book/s you are reviewing in a bit more details and relate your experience directly to the book content or the experience of someone you know well. A bit like preaching a sermon and providing a personal example for the points you want to make.
Thanks for the tip and the comment. I’ll work on it for my next book review.
Check out Jim Elizondo a true master
I’m interested in his stuff. Haven’t taken any of his courses.
If you grass has headed out, reverse your rotation to take advantage of the higher energy forage that has regrown where you have already grazed.
I agree it’s a good way to do it. We fight fescue here and right now the stuff I grazed last week is heading out. I have been over every paddock already during the growing season and so it is all really good quality right now. If we had not hit it by the time the seed head gets hard I have heard leaving it until the regrowth has come up in the fall is the best way to handle it. I’m still learning and experimenting. Most people in my area are firing up the brush hogs but I like to do things with 4 legs not diesel when it is practical.
First
Hope the video was helpful. Thanks for the comment.
Whats crazy is they tag for food ..for us...and they dont know it ....😮❤ i get it tho
We work hard to provide a high quality life for our animals. To keep it up some of the herd feeds us in return. It is a beautiful thing to be in relationship with livestock and to understand we all have a bigger purpose. Thanks for the comment.
June is the best month for calving...
It certainly can be depending on your environment and livestock.
Hmmm never heard that before. Ive got area on our farm that we only grazed once, other areas 4-5 times. The one thing i have noticed is that its the first to green up this spring.
I’ve paid a lot more attention this spring than I have before. It’s interesting. I’m sure if we had the rain the farm we only hit once last year would have grown back pretty quickly. The fields we hit hard in the winter greened up quickly but then stalled.
@@JangusGenetics sounds like northern macon county here. 1.10 in March an 1.45 so far this month. That early spring just seem like it's hit a wall with growth here. Good luck this spring with everything.
Good luck to you as well.
What would you do if your forage gets way ahead of you and seeds out? I’ve already got seed heads on everything here in Texas and don’t have hardly any stocking density
Here in Missouri most people rotary mow it but our county stocking rate is 2 cows per acre so take that for what it’s worth. Greg Judy says leave it until the fall regrowth starts (tall fescue is a cool season grass and is our dominant forage here). My experience says that fescue heads stick around for about 2 weeks then wind or rain knock them out and if there is good green underneath I don’t stress about it too much just keep the cows moving. I’m not sure what your situation is but the main things I worry about are making sure the cows aren’t starving on standing straw. Other than that with cows you might consider moving faster, trying to increase trampling, bringing in more head for a short period of time until you are back to vegetative grass even if you do it cheap or for a short time. I’ve heard of roller crimping, mowing, even tedding the seed heads out. Let me know how it works and what you learn from it. That’s the main thing once you get it dealt with is learn and share so we can all have tools and plans for next year. Good luck to you!
Thanks for sharing. We’ve had our fair share of train wrecks as well and I think most farmers will have stories like yours, whether they tell you or not. Great video!
Thank you for the comment. They are not fun to talk about but how else do we learn.
We as viewers do not have to look at you to hear you, I, myself, much rather prefer to view the livestock that you are talking about instead.
Thanks for the comment. I get tired to looking at myself also 😂. I’ll try and post some more cattle footage.
@@JangusGenetics I hope I didn't offend you at all I just love hearing about cattle and seeing the cattle....
No worries. I thought it was an honest perspective and I appreciate the feedback.
The pastures looks good in the bottom. Cows and calves look content.
They are happy. It’s greening up quick. Looks like rain on Easter and hopefully that means the 7 Sundays after!
I like the business focused videos, keep up the good work! I went to a Ranching for Profit workshop last October in Maryland, it was very helpful. I just need to sit down and calculate Gross Margins on my enterprises.
It really helped me make some decisions on mine. Thanks for the comment. Good luck.
Knowledge is Power.
Well said.
Great video! Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the comment. Glad you enjoyed it.
That was a great fun fact. Going to share this video with my granddaughter. She is 5 and loves animal facts. I did not know this one. Thanks for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it.
So I seeded a contractors mix the other day (ky-31, ryegrass) I’d like to stockpile it for my steers I’m going to finish. Do you have any tips to stockpile it? I’m worried about seed heads with the endophyte and such
I learned from Ian Mitchell Innes to graze the grass up through the growing season. Here in Missouri I try to graze my fescue 2-3 times before it would normally head (to keep it vegetative and prevent heading out) because that is when the endophyte is the worst and seed heads irritate cattle’s eyes and can lead to pink eye. Then I’ll usually try and pull off or slow down in August and let the grass grow up to create a thicker stockpile. I do not have any experience with ryegrass. The idea of grazing the grass up is to leave it a little taller each time you graze it and that way you naturally build your stockpile. Good luck on it. I’m about to read Alan nations pasture profits with stocker cattle. Hoping he has some good insights. I usually try and finish my grass finished cattle about December 1. That’s when the lockers open back up after deer season here and have had my best fall finishing grass getting ready to go dormant for the winter.
@@JangusGenetics that makes sense, I’ve got some south poll yearlings at home now and they seem like they finish different. They were from a bull I rented, this years going to be interesting because I bought a wagyu bull that I threw on my angus cows. So how far down do you graze it down? I’m in Kentucky so it’ll get bush hogged and such. I’m just kind of worried because I’ll be rodeoing when it’s growin 🤣
The mower is a tool but I’ve never made any money with it. If you can keep it rotated and keep the brush out it’s a lot cheaper to graze it than mow it. I don’t like to see anything grazed down below 4-6 inches in the growing season. Just remember grass is a giant solar panel. It has to have leaf to utilize photosynthesis. If you leave it too long it goes to head but too short and you stunt it and it steals energy from the roots to regenerate new leaf. Then you are less drought tolerant. There is no perfect answer but I wish you luck in the learning process. Rotational grazing is the only way I have found to optimize rest and regrowth. If you are not rotating best you can do is mow it and pray for rain. Try and not mow it too short if possible remember the solar panel.
@@JangusGenetics thank you sir for the help!
Good luck!
And people wonder when they are ever going to use that math taught in school. Take care of your health and stay safe.
😂 Thank you for the comment and well wishes.
So...which is better?
Fall vs Spring Calving? I have one of each. You have to figure out what works for you but I prefer September calves if I can get them. Gives the cow enough time to milk and stock up on our fall forage increase then milk production peaks before winter hopefully and calves are ready to crush the spring green up right along with momma. Spring calving herds generally have an easier time getting fat and bred back but I have more health problems mainly pink eye with my herd calving in the spring. Benefits to both and risks just have to try and optimize for your operation. Thanks for the comment hope this helps. Wish I had a yes or no answer for you but that’s farming. The fun is in the journey.
Kentucky 31 fescue grass sucks a grass! You need to move west and solve your problems with it!
It’s tough as nails to kill and stockpiles pretty well. The other 6 months out of the year you are correct. I’m running about 3.5 acres per cow right now and think I can get it closer to 2 as my management improves. Only advantage we have here vs out west.
Promo-SM ☝️
Can only share my experiences. Hope it helps whether you are interested in my cattle or not. Thanks for the comment.
I like this video a lot .. I been doing this since 2019 slowly growing the herd to 60
Thanks for your comments. Exciting to hear other people working to make a living with the land.
Man you doing a good job explaining your management .. perfect
Thank you. Let me know if you have any questions.
Great videos
Glad you like them!