August 2023 Hereford World Magazine

Page 1

REPLACEMENTS

How High is Too High?

Boosting market leverage with Hereford-sired baldies.

The front end of record cattle prices.

— LESS COST
MORE POUNDS

The Churchill home raised steers in the 2023 Hereford Feedlot Program at HRC Feeders

The cost of gain and feed conversions were the best in the program and by far better than the feedlot average.

If you breed your black cows to Churchill bulls, you will increase the demand for your calves and replacement females. We will get you lined up with feeders who are searching for Churchill genetics.

Just give us a call.

The Churchill Bull Sale

Tuesday, January 23

BIRDWELL NEW STANDARD 2912 ET BW0.3 | W W 69 | YW 101 MM 36 | T EAT 1.60 REA 1.32 | M ARB 0.74 BMI$ 561 | CHB$ 213 He is setting a new standard in the beef industry for total trait excellence and extreme carcass merit. His dam, 7098, is the super cow and many of her sons sell January 23! How do you make more money from your commercial herd? BY BUILDING DEMAND FOR YOUR CALVES WITH DATA LIKE THIS: THE CHURCHILL BULL PROGRAM! CHURCHILL CATTLE COMPANY 1862 YADON RD., MANHATTAN, MT 59741 DALE & NANCY VENHUIZEN DALE CELL: 406-580-6421 OFFICE/HOME: 406-284-6421 CHURCHILLCATTLE@GMAIL.COM FIND US ON FACEBOOK & INSTAGRAM WWW.CHURCHILLCATTLE.COM CL 1 DOMINO 267K 1ET BW 3.2 | W W 75 | YW 120 MM 28 | T EAT 1.30 REA 0.77 | M ARB 0.33 BMI$ 389 | CHB$ 183 This powerful new horned stud has many brothers selling January 23! CHURCHILL W4 SHERMAN 2157K ET BW 1.4 | W W 65 | YW 106 | MM 29 | T EAT 1.50 REA 1.17 | M ARB 0.41 | BMI$ 474 | CHB$ 193 Sherman topped our bull sale to 8 major breeders. His fertility is our best ever! Lots of bulls just like him sell January 23!
Average age at harvest 15 months In weight .................. 7 28 lb. Gain/day for 175 days ...... 4.46 lb. Harvest weight ............ 1,511 lb. Carcass value/head ....... $2 ,859 % Choice ..................... 85% Cost of gain .............. $1.17/lb. Conversion ................... 4.96
Hereford.org August 2023 | 1
Baldy Advantage (Periodicals Pending #163) is published four times per year (January, February, August and October) by Hereford Publications Inc., 11500 N.W. Ambassador Dr., Ste 410, Kansas City, MO 64153. Periodicals postage is pending at Kansas City, Mo., and additional entries. Subscription rates, $35/year. Postmaster: Send address changes to Hereford World, 11500 N.W. Ambassador Dr., Ste 410, Kansas City, MO 64153. 4 Letter from the Editor Welcome to the new Baldy Advantage. — by Wes Ishmael 6 Replacements — How High is Too High? The unique answer for each operation depends on lots of factors and pencil pushing. — by Wes Ishmael 12 High Return F1s Hereford-sired baldies grab premiums for commercial cattlemen in Big Sky Country. — by Katie Maupin Miller 18 ACTs Playbook Stepping into the sustainability conversation. — by Sarah Beth Aubrey 22 El Niño Returns Drought conditions improve in some areas. — by Riley Greiten 26 Up and Then Some Market conditions suggest cattle price strength for an extended period. — by Wes Ishmael 30 Quality and Carloads Buyer interest grows for Herefordinfluenced feeders. — by Wes Ishmael 34 Market Tracks Cattle prices stretch higher. — by Wes Ishmael 38 Simplify Multi-trait Selection Indexes account for economics and breeding objectives. — by Shane Bedwell 42 Using Genomic Information to Select Replacements GE-EPDs can help find the most profitable replacements for your program. — by Jamie T. Courter, Ph.D. 46 Test to Control BVD remains a pesky, costly cattle health challenge. — by Heather Smith Thomas 50 Leverage Your Inputs Internal parasites compromise growth, immune function and more. — by Grant Crawford, Ph.D. 54 What’s New 60 From the Field 78 Advertisers’ Index 79 Calendar of Events MANAGEMENT WEATHER MARKETS GENETICS CATTLE HEALTH AHA CORNER Cover photo: “Big Sky Baldies” by Sydnee Shive, taken at Circle B Ranch, Miles City, Mont. LEADING OFF page 12 CONTENTS
2023 By the American Hereford Association page 42 SPECIAL FEATURE page 6 2 | August 2023 Hereford.org
August

| American Hereford Association

Address:

11500 N. Ambassador Dr., Ste. 410, Kansas City, MO 64153 816-842-3757 • Fax 816-243-1314 hworld@hereford.org • Hereford.org

AHA BOARD OF DIRECTORS

President

Bill Goehring, Libertyville, Iowa

Vice president

Wyatt Agar, Thermopolis, Wyo.

Directors

Term expires 2023

Whitey Hunt, Madison, Ga.

Becky King-Spindle, Moriarty, N.M.

Term expires 2024

Jerome Ollerich, Winner, S.D.

Bob Schaffer, Spotsylvania, Va.

Term expires 2025

Chad Breeding, Miami, Texas

Lou Ellen Harr, Jeromesville, Ohio

Travis McConnaughy, Wasola, Mo.

Term expires 2026

Jim Coley, Lafayette, Tenn.

Hampton Cornelius, LaSalle, Colo.

Austin Snedden, Maricopa, Calif.

ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF

Executive vice president

Jack Ward, jward@hereford.org

Chief operating officer and director of breed improvement

Shane Bedwell, sbedwell@hereford.org

Chief financial officer

Leslie Mathews, lmathews@hereford.org

Director of records department

Stacy Sanders, ssanders@hereford.org

Director of commercial programs

Trey Befort, tbefort@herefordbeef.org

Director of youth activities and foundation

Amy Cowan, acowan@hereford.org

National shows coordinator and youth activities assistant

Bailey Clanton, bclanton@hereford.org

Associate director of youth marketing and education

Chloé Fowler, cfowler@hereford.org

Education and information services coordinator and records supervisor

Laura Loschke, lloschke@hereford.org

Director of communications and digital content

Taylor Belle Matheny, tmatheny@hereford.org

Audio-visual specialist

Kelsey Vejraska, kvejraska@hereford.org

Office assistant and event coordinator

Emily Wood, ewood@hereford.org

| Certified Hereford Beef Staff

President and chief executive officer

Amari Seiferman, aseiferman@herefordbeef.org

Brand manager

Ty Ragsdale, tragsdale@herefordbeef.org

| Commercial Programs

Director of commercial programs

Trey Befort, tbefort@herefordbeef.org

Commercial marketing partner - Western Region

Jake Drost, jdrost@hereford.org

| Hereford World Staff

Director of field management and seedstock marketing

Joe Rickabaugh, jrick@hereford.org

Production manager

Caryn Vaught, cvaught@hereford.org

Executive editor

Wes Ishmael, wishmael@hereford.org

Managing editor

Sydnee Shive, sshive@hereford.org

Assistant editor

Katie Maupin Miller, kcommunicates@gmail.com

Advertising coordinator

Alison Marx, amarx@hereford.org

Creative services coordinator

Bailey Lewis, blewis@hereford.org

Editorial designer/assistant

Cindy Himmelberg, chimmelberg@hereford.org

Graphic designers

Sharon Blank and Teri Wolfgang

Contributing writers

Jamie T. Courter, Grant Crawford, Riley Greiten and Heather Smith Thomas

| Field Staff

Western Region – Contact Joe Rickabaugh Ariz., Calif., Idaho, Nev., Ore., Utah and Wash. 785-633-3188, jrick@hereford.org

Mountain Region – Kevin Murnin Colo., Mont., N.D., Wyo., central and western Canada 406-853-4638, kmurnin@hereford.org

North Central Region – Aaron Friedt Kan., Minn., Neb., and S.D. 701-590-9597, afriedt@hereford.org

Upper Midwest Region – Noah Benedict Ill., Ind., Ky., Md., Mich., Ohio, Pa., W.Va., and Wis. 217-372-8009, noahb@hereford.org

Southwest Region – Cord Weinheimer Ark., La., N.M., Okla., and Texas 830-456-3749, cweinheimer@hereford.org

Eastern Region – Tommy Coley Ala., Fla., Ga., Miss., N.C., S.C., Tenn., and Va. 815-988-7051, tcoley@hereford.org

Central Region – Joe Rickabaugh Iowa, Mo., and eastern Canada 785-633-3188, jrick@hereford.org

Northeast Region – Contact the AHA Conn., Del., D.C., Maine, Mass., N.H., N.J., N.Y., R.I., Vt., and eastern Canadian provinces

The publisher reserves the right to decline any advertising for any reason at any time without liability, even though previously acknowledged or accepted.

Member Cattle Registration Fees Age of calf Paper Electronic Up to 4 months $14.50 $12.50 4-8 months $20.50 $17.50 8-12 months $27.50 $22.50 More than 12 months $52.50 $52.50 Member of Commercial Advertising Representative Jay Carlson, Carlson Media Group LLC 913-967-9085, jay@carlsonmediagroup.com
and
from grazing since 1942” Select groups of heifers for sale.
150 Bulls Annually PRIVATE TREATY Hereford & Braford Southern Raised & Adapted • • • Complete Performance Records • • • 400 Registered Cows Hereford.org August 2023 | 3
Contacts
“Performance
quality
Selling

Welcome to Baldy Advantage

New look. New name. Even sharper focus on commercial cow-calf producers. Baldy Advantage replaces what were previously known as the commercial tabloid issues of Hereford World, which focused on the commercial cow-calf business. This new publication, tailored specifically for the commercial producer, represents the American Hereford Association’s (AHA) ongoing efforts to serve commercial producers more effectively.

The AHA and its members have long been committed to the unmatched value of heterosis provided by disciplined, complementary crossbreeding. They also believe Hereford’s unique inherent genetic strengths make the breed an essential component to effective, efficient crossbreeding.

Narrowing margins, along with increasing production risk and financial risk over time, demand more industry use of heterosis. Increased management of both direct and maternal heterosis optimizes inputs and outputs. Heterosis also improves economic and environmental sustainability.

For instance, compared to their straightbred counterparts, Hereford-sired half-blood beef cows last longer in the herd due in part to increased fertility and longevity. That means fewer replacements and less depreciation over time. Hereford-sired F1s also wean more pounds of calf during their production lifetimes. Heterosis increases overall production efficiency and reduces costs. All of that is tough to ignore.

The issue in your hands

Across Baldy Advantage issues, commercial producers will share the role of Hereford-sired black baldies, red baldies, tiger-stripes and Hereford-sired Brahma-cross baldies in their programs. Each issue will include information about cattle markets, tackle contemporary issues affecting the cowcalf business and more.

As you thumb through this issue, you’ll notice the user-friendly publication size and the higher quality paper. You will also find the magazine sorted by topic. For instance, you will find all the marketing articles in one section, all the animal health articles in another section and so on. Look for colored labels on the first page of each story to identify the section. AHA members will find a section toward the back of the magazine devoted to Association news and announcements.

As always, any publication worth its salt is a work in progress. Please let us know what you like or don’t and what you find useful or not.

Thanks for embarking with us on this new journey that is the Baldy Advantage.

Sincerely,

11500 N Ambassador Dr., Ste 410 • Kansas City, MO 64153 • (816) 842-3757 • Fax (816) 243-1314
4 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Powerful • Productive • Promising Walker Herefords Eric Walker Family P.O. Box 146 n Morrison, TN 37357 Eric’s Cell (931) 607-6356 n Cody’s Cell (931) 607-0337 wphf@benlomand.net n WalkerHerefordFarm.com Conner Jaggers (270) 218-1820 Selling 100 Lots Stout, powerful females n Exciting herd bull prospects Breed leading performance and carcass genetics Frozen embryos from the freshest matings available Don’t miss this opportunity to advance your program forward with / W genetics! Videos of entire sale offering available at WalkerHerefordFarm.com and LiveAuctions.tv Watch the sale and bid live online. FOUNDATIONS for the FUTURE’23 Monday, September 4, 2023 At the Walker Hereford Sale Facility Morrison, Tennessee n 11 AM (Central Time) 796E 017 2264 2248 2244 2441 0227 2256 Hereford.org August 2023 | 5

Replacements — How High is Too High?

The unique answer for each operation depends on lots of factors and pencil pushing.

Rebuilding herds thinned by drought is on the minds of many producers, but that’s about all. Drought has improved in many parts of the country but persisted and intensified in others.

“We want to be excited about the opportunity to rebuild as an industry, but I’m not convinced we’re beyond the drought, especially in the southern half of the Great Plains,” says Rick Machen, the Paul C. Genho Endowed Chair in Ranch Management and interim director at the King Ranch Institute for Ranch Management, Kingsville, Texas. “The worst thing we could do is jump out and pay high prices for replacements and then not have the forage to support them.”

Put another way, Lee Schulz, Iowa State University (ISU) Extension livestock economist, believes the industry is at least one year away — maybe two — from fullfledged national herd expansion, assuming the current drought ends.

“Resource managers can proclaim the drought broken when soil moisture has been restored and forages have recovered to the point that they can tolerate grazing and continue their recovery,” Machen says. “How quickly this process can unfold is largely dependent on how well the resources (soil and plants) were managed prior to and during the drought. Aggressive or excessive grazing prior to the drought accelerated drought onset and its progression. Build drought resilience into your annual grazing management plan.”

Plus, Schulz explains, producers respond to profits rather than prices. By that measure, calves this fall likely represent the first profit many producers have seen in years.

“Profit means different things to different people in different situations,” Schulz says. For instance, he explains one profit calculation is defined by the money left after a business pays all costs. Producers must consider this calculation when making investment or expansion decisions. Another one views profit as the return above variable expenses, which can help guide short-term decisions on production levels.

Running the numbers

When the opportunity does arrive for expansion, the likely sky-high prices for replacement females demand the sharpest of pencils as producers ferret out how much is too much to pay.

“There’s not a universal answer because of the diversity of financial goals and objectives for those who run cows,” Machen says.

However, there are some age-old factors that should be part of the determination.

In broad terms, Elliott Dennis, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension livestock economist, explains that finding the appropriate price level depends on individual producers’ expectations of current and future market conditions.

“These market conditions generally include animal productivity, calf prices,

MANAGEMENT
If you don’t know unit cost of production per calf, you don’t know whether the price offered is a good one and you can’t know what can be paid for a replacement female.
continued on page 8... 6 | August 2023 Hereford.org
— Rick Machen, King Ranch Institute for Ranch Management

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If your herd doesn’t have EFBeef genetics as an input… you are continuing to fall behind in tomorrow’s beef industry. We’ve been sowing the good crop of beef genes into the EFBeef Hereford bulls for generations to lock in a bountiful harvest of seed so your inputs can thrive in tomorrow’s U.S. beef cattle market.

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During 2023, EFBeef celebrates our 75th anniversary in our current location, offering polled Hereford bulls to commercial cattlemen. We are also proud of the fact that we are a 7th generation family outfit celebrating our 139th year of seedstock Hereford production. It all started in 1883 with the purchase of two registered cows and imported sire, Beekjay Hero.

The EFBeef program has never wavered from producing real world, functional cattle that are expected to excel in the commercial sector, returning net profit to their respective owners. You can expect your purchase at EFBeef to be backed by a guarantee that has stood the test of time, 140 years’ worth. You can expect your purchase to be genetically bred for the U.S. beef marketplace.

Hereford.org August 2023 | 7

Replacement Value Factors

Elliott Dennis, University of Nebraska-Lincoln Extension livestock economist, provided the following guidance in a recent issue of In the Cattle Markets from the Livestock Marketing Information Center.

Productive life — Each cow has a useful or productive life — some are long, and some are short. The longer she lives, the more value she has. This productive life has a direct tie to the cull rates of the whole herd. While cull rates vary by year and age of cows, they may be used as a rough measure of average cow life. If a rancher has an average annual cull rate of 16%, on average, a cow lasts 6.25 years in that herd (100/16=6.25).

Cow productivity — Separate from the productive life of a cow, this figure is typically measured in terms of the weaning weight of calves. The size and number of calves weaned and sold per cow exposed to a bull will alter this value considerably. Heavier weaning weights imply more income generated per cow, allowing a bigger budget for replacement females in higher-income herds.

Cow costs — If weaning weights were all that mattered, we would raise extremely large cows. But large cows tend to cost more and have larger maintenance costs. What it (truly) costs to run a cow impacts the value. The higher the cost, the less one can afford to pay for replacements.

Salvage value — If the salvage or cull value is expected to increase over time, then what a producer can afford to pay per replacement female increases. In the past, these values have been fairly low, but these figures have increased over the past few years.

Calf prices — If cattle prices over the productivity life of the cow are expected to be high (or higher), on average, then the price cattlemen can pay for replacements increases. Understanding the cattle cycle dynamics is important here.

Interest rates — Higher feeder cattle interest rates imply more expensive borrowing costs, and thus the less one can pay for replacements. Over the past 15 years, interest rates have been declining, but in the last six months, they have jumped significantly — from about 5.5% to 8.2%. If you are not borrowing money, then you can pay a lot more for replacements.

inflation, cow inventories, weather events, etc. — all of which contribute to the value of a replacement cow,” Dennis explains. “Ultimately, these factors contribute to a single breakeven value (see Replacement Value Factors).”

Schulz believes calculating Net Present Value (NPV) offers the most accurate assessment of replacement value.

“Net Present Value is a means of taking into account that a time value of money exists and discounts future returns such that all results are in ‘today’s dollars,’” Schulz says. “Net present value is calculated by subtracting the initial investment from the sum of discounted cash flows. If the net present value is positive, meaning that the discounted futures earnings are greater than the initial investment, then the investment has a earned a rate of return greater than the discount rate and is acceptable to pursue.”

Further, Schulz points to an ISU decision aid (see Value Assessment Tools, Net Present Value of Beef Replacement Females) that determines NPV, as well as the maximum bid price. The latter calculates the initial investment value equating NPV to zero, given the required rate of return (discount rate) or opportunity cost of capital.

“The maximum bid price provides a benchmark to compare to current market prices,” Schulz explains. “If current market prices are below the calculated maximum bid price, then purchasing replacement females would likely be in order. If current market prices are above the calculated maximum bid price, purchases of replacement animals should likely be delayed.”

The decision aid also allows users to change input levels and conduct sensitivity analyses. For instance, looking at the impact of reducing annual cow cost by $50, increasing weaning weights by 25 pounds or getting another calf or two from the replacement.

Although it’s more of an annual decision for some producers, given what markets incentivize each year, Schulz also encourages producers to compare the cost of buying replacements versus developing their own (see Raising Versus Buying Heifers for Beef Cow Replacement).

It starts with knowing costs

“If you don’t know unit cost of production per calf, you don’t know whether the price offered is a good one, and you can’t know what can be paid for a replacement female,” Machen says.

Unit cost of production is calculated by dividing total annual cow maintenance cost by average weaning weight adjusted for weaning rate. Unlike breakeven cost, Machen explains this calculation does not include secondary income, such as revenue from open replacement females, market cows and salvage bulls.

Replenishing drought-culled herds always offers an opportunity to change the composition of the cow herd if change is warranted, Machen says. It could be a need to reduce mature cow size, increase adaptability, etc.

“Average weaning weights across the industry have not increased appreciably in decades; yet, mature cow size has increased steadily. It tells you the unit cost of production is increasing,” Machen explains.

Ask someone what it costs them to run a cow. Commonly, the answer boils down to variable expenses, which are really the proverbial tip of the iceberg.

...Replacements continued from page 6 8 | August 2023 Hereford.org

“Supplemental nutrition, labor and depreciation are typically among the top five contributors to annual cow cost. Supplemental nutrition is influenced by weather and stocking rate, while labor is usually a fixed cost.

Depreciation (a non-cash cost) can be influenced by management actions/decisions,” Machen says. Keep in mind, he refers to depreciation calculated for accounting and management purposes rather than depreciation calculated for taxes.

More specifically, depreciation revolves around cow cost and salvage value. Machen explains annual per-head depreciation is determined by dividing the difference between cow cost and salvage value by the useful life of the cow.

Since depreciation is not a cash cost, Machen says many producers pay it too little attention. “Perhaps a more resonating approach is to quantify the impact of cow purchase price (and the concomitant depreciation) on weaned-calf unit cost of production,” he says.

Machen provides the example of buying a cow for $3,000. He estimated the cow’s salvage value after five years of use at $932 (1,159 pounds and $89.06 per hundredweight). That equates to $2,068 total depreciation for the cow: $414 per year. Bottom line, cow depreciation in a herd with an 84% weaning rate and an average weaning weight of 500 pounds means that depreciation adds $20 per hundredweight to weaned-calf unit cost of production for the cow’s first five calves.

The four variables above represent the opportunities to lower the contribution of depreciation to weaned calf unit cost of production in Machen’s scenario: reduce replacement cost, increase salvage value, increase average weaning weight or increase the percentage of calf crop weaned.

As well, Machen points out cow longevity has an obvious impact on depreciation.

“Cows that remain productive beyond their removal from the depreciation schedule turn the depreciation expense into a ‘depreciation credit,’” Machen explains. “Productive cows remaining in the herd after weaning a fifth calf (in his example) do not incur depreciation expense and therefore wean calves with a lower unit cost of production. Likewise, long-productive cows reduce the number of heifers kept for replacement or the number of cows purchased in a high-priced market.”

Value Assessment Tools

Gathering and accounting for factors to assess replacement female value is neither quick, nor easy. That’s why automated decision aids developed by Land Grant universities can be so useful. A few are listed below.

2023 Beef Heifer Replacement Forecast

University of Nebraska Lincoln (UNL)

2023 Heifer Replacement Values

Kansas State University (K-State)

“The primary difference between these tools is the assumptions/data used in the calculations and how flexible one wants to be in modifying the assumptions,” according to Elliott Dennis, Extension livestock economist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL). “The UNL estimates are based on the Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute at the University of Missouri projections for cattle value, as well as on the cost of production and related data from UNL’s Gudmundsen Sandhills Laboratory ... Alternative scenarios are provided but one cannot adjust the models’ underlying assumptions. K-State estimates are largely based on USDAERS 10-year projections, they are static (produce one value rather than a distribution of values) and the user can modify most assumptions.”

Net Present Value of Beef Replacement Females

Iowa State University (ISU)

Raising Versus Buying Heifers for Beef Cow

Replacement

Iowa State University (ISU)

“A word of caution,” Dennis says. “Most tools use a representative operation that does not reflect an individual producer but rather an average over many producers. There is no expectation that the cost and production assumptions reflect exactly a particular producer. Forecasts, such as the tools mentioned, are intended to help individuals create a reference point for individual situations and expectations of future events. Producers can use these, other information and their own ideas to arrive at what a reasonable value might be for a heifer/cow purchased or retained for replacement.”

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High Return F1s

Hereford-sired cattle grab premiums for commercial cattlemen in Big Sky Country.

Hybrid vigor has long lined cattlemen’s pockets with added profit potential. But, in eastern Montana Circle B emphasizes vigor. Circle B is a commercial cattle operation owned by the Borman family and run by just over a dozen cowboys and their families. The Bormans breed their 1,600 straightbred Angus cows to Hereford bulls, and the added hardiness of the resulting F1 calves pays off in spades.

“Six or seven years ago, we calved 550 replacements. We had 68 calves in a 24-hour period when it was 40 degrees below zero, and even in this extreme weather the calves had enough vigor to get up and nurse quickly,” recalls Circle B’s manager, Brent Morrison.

A once self-proclaimed “Angus man” who has cowboyed and managed ranches since he was 20, Morrison was unsure about the bald-faced bulls when he joined the operation 13 years ago. That was until he noted firsthand the added efficiency, fertility, longevity, docility and sustainability synonymous with the Hereford breed. Today, he touts the many advantages of not only Circle B’s red-and-white bull battery but also the premium-grabbing F1 offspring that continue to make new marketing opportunities for the ranch.

Circle B was founded by the father-son duo Frank and Fred Borman in 1998. Patriarch Frank Borman is known as an astute businessman not afraid to shoot for the moon — literally. Borman commanded Apollo 8, the

first mission to fly around the moon. And when it comes to Circle B, the Borman family is equally as pioneering and progressive. For more than two decades, Circle B has served as a textbook example of a profitable cowcalf operation, mixing management, good ol’ fashioned stockmanship, benchmarking metrics and complementary genetics. Fred’s wife, Donna, was the one in the family first taken with the latter. She read about the power of crossbreeding in “Storey’s Guide to Raise Beef Cattle” when the family first began their foray into Big Sky Country. Today, Circle B’s F1 cattle reflect the family’s commitment to artfully melding progressive ideas with proven tactics and business savvy with industry tradition. And the operation’s use of Hereford genetics pays off in the bull pen, at feeder calf sales, for their repeat buyers and in their budding replacement female market.

MANAGEMENT
For more than 20 years, Hereford bulls have been adding pounds and profits to Circle B’s calves. The black baldy calves are hardier, healthier and better suited for their eastern Montana home than their commercial Angus dams.
12 | August 2023 Hereford.org

Bald-faced bull battery

To see the many advantages of Circle B’s use of Hereford genetics, it makes sense to start in the bull pen. For more than 20 years, Feddes Herefords, Manhattan, Mont., has served as Circle B’s bull supplier. Marvin Feddes and his sons, Tim and Dan, know Circle B’s operation, its cow herd and its goals. Each year, the Feddes family cuts out well-suited herd sire prospects for Circle B before Morrison makes his final selection.

Borman and Morrison like Circle B’s sires to be sound, rugged, moderate, thick, deep, easy-fleshing and wellsuited for the ups and downs of Montana’s weather.

“Dan and Tim really focused on the traits we want, which are structure, capacity and the terminal aspect, too. They really just cater to us,” Morrison says.

The long-standing working relationship between Circle B and Feddes Herefords cannot be understated. Morrison notes that the Feddes family knows their cow herd, as well as any cowboy knows their string of ranch horses, with the brothers easily being able to recall the generations of performance and pedigrees behind each bull prospect.

“If you talk to Dan and Tim, they just know everything about every cow and every bull, and they really have pushed hard on what we want our cows to be,” Morrison says. “We don’t want to be feeding 20 pounds of hay in the winter if we’re feeding hay and a couple pounds of cake. We want that feed efficiency there. And the bulls are the same way, too. Our bulls in the winter get about 30 pounds of feed, and they hold their condition.”

Morrison also appreciates the ranch-ready nature of the Feddes Hereford bulls. Calved in Montana themselves, the bulls’ calves hold up better during the sometimes extreme and unforgiving calving season. Their calves come easy, at predictable weights and are up nursing so quickly that it sometimes startles first-calf heifers, Morrison laughs. But it’s not just the Hereford-influenced offspring that are well suited for the West. These bald-faced bulls hold up better than their black-hided peers, according to Morrison.

“They seem to do a lot better job of taking care of themselves, and they stand up a lot better. They don’t get lame,” he says.

The Hereford bulls’ heavy, rugged structure keeps them sound and comfortable even in the sometimes tricky terrain. On average, sires spend at least five breeding seasons at Circle B, which averages a 95-98% conception rate. As Morrison notes, thanks to their rugged structure,

added fertility and gentle dispositions, Hereford bulls are rarely culled for broken legs or broken “pieces.” In fact, over the last 13 years, he has only seen one Hereford bull break a leg. From his previous experience with Angus bulls, Morrison expected two a year.

While cowboys inherently run the risk of injuries, Morrison says his crew suffer far fewer injuries due to the disposition of the Hereford and Hereford-influenced cattle. Even green cowboys can successfully gather Hereford bulls, and their disposition is passed along to their calves.

Premium grabbing feeder calves

An easy-going nature isn’t all the bald face offers. The Hereford influence also adds longevity, soundness and efficiency to Circle B’s F1 calves. The black baldy calf crop separates itself from neighboring straightbred, blackhided herds, with the calves being more vigorous and faster growing. Their added docility shines at branding time when the baldy calves are easily handled and sorted, but their good temperament really pays at weaning.

“I think it comes down to docility, and it comes down to feed conversion gain. They’re not stressed out, so they’re gaining better, they’re getting less sickness. We’re pulling less and less every year. The cowboys are actually getting bored because you might go 15-20 days and only pull one or two where we used to pull 70-80 a day, and we had a lot of cattle,” Morrison says.

When the baldies are weaned, they’re taken to the Circle B feedlot in Hysham, Mont., to be wintered and backgrounded. Since all Circle B cattle winter on the Hysham portion of the operation, the black-white-face calves are easily compared to the black-hided, straightbred commercial Angus replacements, and the inherent advantages of the baldy cattle are front and center.

“Those black calves come in; it usually takes them an extra day or two days to really come around to feed. Whereas a Hereford calf, pretty much the day you put it in there, that little bugger will go and start eating something,” Morrison says. “The Hereford calves are just gaining better on our lot.”

Perhaps even more impressive than the Circle B calves’ quality is their consistency. Their Feddes sires and commercial Angus dams stamp out incredibly uniform calves. When riding pastures, Morrison notes the baldy calves are just cookie-cutter.

continued on page 14...

Hereford.org August 2023 | 13

“We usually get 70% of our cows bred in the first cycle or more. So, the baldy calves are just uniform, and the little ones are just as fancy. They’re just a couple of weeks later,” he says.

In addition to the baldy calves being uniform, fastgrowing, efficient, healthy and manageable, the feeder cattle are also backed by Circle B’s progressive management. Circle B calves are enrolled in the following value-added programs: Non-Hormone Treated Cattle (NHTC), Where Food Comes From CARE Certified, Superior Verified, VAC 60, Superior Progressive Genetics, Beef Quality Assurance (BQA), IMI Global Certified and Hereford Advantage.

The Hereford Advantage program is an IMI Global verification of Hereford-sired feeder calves with superior genetics, health and management, which is supported by the American Hereford Association (AHA) staff. Hereford-sired calves eligible for the program are source and age verified, sired by bulls ranking in the top 50% of the Hereford breed for the Certified Hereford Beef® Index (CHB$) index, have received at least two rounds of vaccinations and are raised by BQA-certified producers. The CHB$ index measures which Hereford sires have the most potential to produce the most profitable offspring when bred to commercial Angus cows for terminal offspring. The index places emphasis on feedlot performance, efficiency and end-product merit. By using Hereford sires with the genetics needed to qualify for the Hereford Advantage program, Circle B has seen improvements in its feeder cattle. But the AHA staff support that accompanies the program has proved just as valuable.

“Trey Befort (AHA director of commercial programs) has done a great job for us, and he is there repping every Superior sale we’re at and talking to people,” Morrison says. He believes the more AHA promotes its programs, the more it helps him as a producer.

The Circle B F1 feeder calves sell in the Superior Livestock Bellringer sale at the beginning of the year; there is no shortage of interest. You could say their lots really do ring buyers’ bells. Year after year, their calves fetch premium prices. During last year’s sale, Circle B’s black baldy NHTC calves brought more than a lot of comparable weight GAP4certified black steers from a reputable brand.

“Those steers went out the door for $1,760 a head. I’ve never seen anything like that in my life,” Morrison says.

Although the calves fetch a premium, the number of repeat buyers underscore their value. Hagemann Farms, Five Rivers,

Beller Feedlot, and Adams Land and Cattle Company have repeatedly purchased feeder cattle from Circle B, and their continued interest serves as a great testimony.

While not all buyers offer Circle B carcass data, the figures that do roll into eastern Montana are impressive.

Adam’s Land and Cattle purchased more than 400 steers and reported that the lot gained 4 pounds per day with just over 91% grading USDA Prime and Choice. These baldfaced cattle making the grade further prove the merit of the F1 cross’ profitability from gate to plate.

Making mamas

Borman, Morrison and crew have worked for more than a decade to perfect the Circle B cow herd. Selecting moderate, deep, wide, easy-doing, fertile cows with excellent mothering ability.

These traits are apparent in the 800 head of bred baldy heifers on summer grass at the ranch’s Miles City, Mont., location. This year, for the first time, Circle B retained all of their F1 black baldy females to market as bred heifers rather than sell them as feeders. Their dams are the most elite of the Circle B program.

Like all of the Herefordinfluenced calves, these heifers have shown that their disposition is well suited for the commercial cattlemen — easy to ride through and move from pasture to pasture yet not so tame that they’re hard to push. They’re truly cattle made by cowboys for cowboys; cows that will get the job done with the resources at hand. Morrison knows because Circle B retained 30 head of frostbitten baldy heifers several years ago. Even among the well-sourced commercial Angus cows, the baldies stand out — and not just for their white faces.

“The only reason they got to stay here is that they had short ears and short tails, so we kept them, and they are actually outperforming our black cows,” Morrison says. “They’re a lot thicker. They take a lot less feed than the black cows, and they just hold their condition and have a lot of milk.”

Morrison notes their bred heifers are designed to be top-notch mama cows.

“I think they’re a cow that you can take home, and they’re going to go out and work for you. You’re not going to work for them. And I’ll just almost guaranteed they’re going to be good mothers and have good thick calves,” Morrison says.

... High Return F1s continued from page 13 14 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Circle B manager, Brent Morrison (left), notes that the black baldies’ good disposition makes cattle handling easier, which leads to improved gains.

125 Two-Year-Old Bulls

62nd ANNUAL BULL SALE Thurs., OCTOBER 5, 2023 • Comanche, TX
and Pasture Raised
North Central Texas.
to
and forage
North and South!
body condition, not too fat and ready for service!
with good feet and legs!
balanced EPDs!
percentage well pigmented! Mark your calendar for our sale! • Contact us for a catalog! Box 10 • Comanche, TX 76442 John 325-642-0745 • Tom 325-642-0748 Office 325-356-2284 • john@dudleybros.com • www.dudleybros.com DUDLEY BROS. Hereford.org August 2023 | 15
Bred, Developed
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16 | August 2023 Hereford.org

MISS ADVANCE FEMALE PAGEANT 2023

At the Ranch • September 14, 2023

SELLING 60 ELITE LINE ONE FEMALES

14 POWEFUL BRED HEIFERS

Bred to HH Advance 0270H, the high selling bull from our 2022 Sale 25 YOUNG BRED COWS

March and early April calvers with several donor prospects included 6 PROVEN DONORS • 20 OPEN FALL YEARLING HEIFERS

HH MISS ADVANCE 8099F ET {DLF,HYF,IEF}

Sire: HH ADVANCE 6007D ET

CE 0.5; BW 3.4; WW 50; YW 79; DMI 0.1; SC 1.0; SCF 18.2; MM 24; M&G 49; MCE 1.6; MCW 54; UDDR 1.40; TEAT 1.40; CW 63; FAT 0.021; REA 0.15; MARB 0.13;

BMI$ 363; BII$ 434; CHB$ 106

R ole model brood cow that has been a donor in our program for the last 3 years. Perfect uddered, big middled, thick topped and goes back to the great 5139R donor.  SHE SELLS!

Sale offering is 100% parent verified and has GE-EPDs.

Videos will be viewable in late August at  www.holdenherefords.com, and the livestocklink.com

Sale cattle will be viewable at the ranch anytime this summer and on display sale week.

F ollow us on Facebook for more updates @holdenherefords or check out www.holdenherefords.com

Watch for more details in the September issue of the Hereford World .

Catalogs sent on request. Call or text 406-450-1029 or send us an email.

HH MISS ADVANCE 8339F {DLF,HYF,IEF,MSUDF}

Sire: HH ADVANCE 3297A ET

CE 2.2; BW 3.1; WW 59; YW 103; DMI 0.6; SC 0.9; SCF 16.4; MM 32; M&G 61; MCE 2.2; MCW 88; UDDR 1.30; TEAT 1.40; CW 84; FAT 0.031; REA 0.62; MARB 0.23; BMI$ 370; BII$ 452; CHB$ 142

E xceptional EPDs, pigment, udder quality, and phenotype.  8339F has been in our donor program since she was a 3-year-old. Here is a donor with huge potential to go in any direction.  SHE SELLS!

Make

••••

13TH

3139 Valier Dupuyer Rd. • Valier, MT 59486 • 406-279-3301

Home 406-450-1029 Jack’s cell • 406-450-0129 Jay D. Evans 406-600-3118 Eric Lawver • 406-590-3307 Brad Holden jtholden@3rivers.net • www.holdenherefords.com

GE•EPD AHA
GE•EPD AHA
800-422-2117 Your Plans To Attend Montana Hereford Association Fall Tour
12TH and
www.montanahereford.org COME JOIN US FOR THE SALE AFTER THE TOUR Hereford.org August 2023 | 17
SEPTEMBER

ACT’s Playbook

Stepping into Sustainability, Part II: Getting Started

Identify your values and goals.

In the July Hereford World issue, we talked a bit about the importance of livestock breeders and enthusiasts working to “take back” the word “climate” to be sure our voices (and the positive work we are already doing) are reflected in the global conversation around this topic. While many cattle breeders that read the Baldy Advantage and Hereford World may feel disconnected to this topic because of disinterest, distrust or simply feeling it isn’t applicable, the fact is we cannot ignore it. Whether you have a small show cattle operation or a large

cow-calf enterprise, our work in sustainability is noticed by the public. So, if we do want to ensure that at least our neighbors and customers know how we’re achieving sustainable aims, start with these five tips:

Five Ways to Step into Sustainability

• No. 1: It’s about YOUR values

• No. 2: It’s about YOUR goals

• No. 3: It’s about YOUR bandwidth

• No. 4: It’s about YOUR long-game strategy

• No. 5: It’s about YOUR sphere of influence

In the interest of column space, we’re going to cover the first two of these, and we’ll pick up in September with the conclusion of the three-part series.

It’s about your values

As an agricultural consultant and writer, I’m constantly pivoting to work on the current topics in the industry, which is how I got into the “climate conversation.” I can assure you that I didn’t wake up one day and decide to tackle this topic. Rather, I noticed how one-sided conversations around climate were and how agriculture and the livestock industry was sometimes left out or “assumed” into a position.

The work you do in sustainability and climate isn’t in opposition to your values. It should quite simply support them. The climate conversation is wide open with a variety of viewpoints — some you likely agree with strongly, some you may find ridiculous and others you may not be sure how you feel. Your plans in sustainability should be like any other plan — one that supports your beliefs and core values.

It’s about your goals

Like him or dislike him, Blackrock CEO, Larry Fink, is famous for his positions on business and climate. One he’s commonly credited with sharing: being involved in climate is going to be good for business. While not endorsing his opinions, there is a nugget of truth.

Any work your farm or ranch does to step into sustainability must absolutely align with your goals and cannot be in opposition to them.

Sustainability is often just a matter of improving a practice, saving energy and reducing waste. That’s why once you decide to step into sustainability, you realize that you can make this topic work for you rather than just attempting to “do sustainability” in a way that isn’t connected to your core.

That’s enough for this month; but consider looking around your operation to see where you are already stepping into sustainability and decide, which stakeholder — be it customers, industry or neighbors — need to know the good work you already do.

MANAGEMENT
Sarah Beth Aubrey is an entrepreneur and founder of Aubrey Coaching and Training (ACT). She can be reached at sarah@sarahbethaubrey.com. | by Sarah Beth Aubrey
18 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Any work your farm or ranch does to step into sustainability must absolutely align with your goals and cannot be in opposition to them.
7791 Eastern Ave. S.E., Grand Rapids, Mich. 49508 Scott 616-445-2146 • scott@mcdonaldplumbing.com Drew 616-368-0818 • drew.flokstra@gmail.com Visitors always welcome! Find us on Facebook: McDonald Farms Definitely Different OCT. 14, 2023 • ALTO, MI SEPT. 2, 2023 • MAYS LICK, KY LOOK FOR OUR CONSIGNMENTS TO MF 793 KENNA 87G 4K ET Calved: 3/17/2022 • Polled MANIFEST 87G x CRR 8Y JULIA 793 ET P44370584 MF 486 LYDIA 9024 6L ET {MDP} Calved: 3/14/2023 • Polled BOYD POWER SURGE 9024 x STACIE 486 P44473124 CCCC MS ENTICE 45C 227K ET Calved: 2/26/2022 • Polled UPS ENTICE 9365 x VICTOR 33Z45C P44375066 MOHICAN ROSE 96G ET {DLF,HYF,IEF,MSUDF} Calved: 2/27/2019 INNISFAIL WHR X651/723 4013 ET x RHF 8Y ROSE GARDEN 4067B ET Genetic opportunities being offered! P44024034 BK FLAWLESS SWEETS 8102F ET Calved: 1/3/2018 • Polled CATAPULT 109 x HAPP SWEET ANNIE 4A P44010409 TH 92C 33D MEGAN 231J {DLF,HYF,IEF,MSUDF} Calved: 1/24/2021 HAROLDSON’S UPGRADE T100 33D x TH 224Z 102A MEGAN 92C Genetic opportunities being offered! P44240772 BK CMCC KOOL PROFIT K001 ET Featured service sire BAR STAR FRESH PRINCE 018 ET Featured service sire Hereford.org August 2023 | 19
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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2023
noon MDT • at the farm near Greeley, CO GPS address: 14179
CO
100 SPRING CALVING FEMALES & OPEN SPRING 2023-BORN HEIFERS •••
4 PROVEN HERD BULLS & A FEW SELECT SPRING 2023-BORN HERD BULL PROSPECTS ••• ••• ENTIRE FROZEN INVENTORY ••• These herd sires and/or their progeny sell Wednesday, September 27th: Jo   G reeley for th complete herd dpersal! Marshall and Barbara Ernst (970) 381-6316 Kevin and Courtney Ernst (970) 218-7140 14179 CR 70, Greeley, CO 80631 Email: info@ernstherefords.com Dustin N. Layton (405) 464-2455 Email: laytond@yahoo.com Chisolm Kinder (405) 747-4683 laytonauction.com Dale Stith (918) 760-1550 Email: dalestith@yahoo.com To request a sale catalog, contact the owners or either of the sale managers. CRR 824 DIVERGENT 170 AHA P44294516 Homozygous Polled A calving-ease specialist with superior eye appeal and fleshing ability. He sells plus his progeny and service. CMF ERNST POWER BROKER 405F AHA P43986389 Homozygous Polled This CHB sire sells along with his progeny and service. Proven calving-ease with spread. Short marked, heavily pigmented. UPS SENSATION 2504 ET {SOD} AHA P43347360 Polled HIs daughters are powerful females with added bone, hip and body and equipped with gorgeous udders. Several daughters sell! KT BUILT TUFF 1010 {SOD} AHA P43231454 Homozygous Polled Foundation calving-ease with superior maternal presence. His lineage will be included in many of the females offered. Hereford.org August 2023 | 21
12
WCR 70, Greeley,
•••
•••

El Niño Returns

Drought conditions improve in some areas.

Welcome moisture across much of the United States since last winter finally began pushing aside the widespread, multi-year drought for some producers. By June, 41% of the nation’s cattle were in areas impacted by drought, compared to 50% a year earlier.

“We’ve turned the corner, we’re getting some moisture, people have a reason to be optimistic, but it takes a long time to turn the ship,” Dale Blasi, Kansas State University beef cattle nutrition and management specialist, explained toward the end of June. Western Kansas endured drought as long as anyone in the nation, but the Sunflower state finally received muchneeded moisture. At the same time, neighboring Missouri illustrated deepening drought experienced by others.

However, drought conditions in many of the hardest-hit portions of cow country should improve with the recent arrival of El Niño.

“El Niño has returned for the first time since 2018-2019. However, the warm ocean waters have not yet begun to strongly exert an influence on the atmosphere above,” explained Brad Rippey, USDA meteorologist in June. “Such a connection will likely not occur for a few more months, until late summer or autumn.

Until then, we’re at the mercy of other atmospheric whims, such as the blocking highpressure system that parked itself over the central U.S.,

leading to record-shattering heat in Texas and drought in the Midwest.”

El Niño 101

El Niño-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is a periodic and recurring climate pattern involving changes in sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. In June, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA) scientists expected at least a 56% chance of the current El Niño becoming a strong event; 84% chance of at least a moderate event.

Typically, El Niño brings above average moisture to the southern and southeastern portions of the United States. The opposite is expected during periods of La Niña conditions. The most recent La Niña impacting the U.S. ended in March.

“In general, El Niño-related temperature and precipitation impacts across the United States occur during the cold half of the year (October through March),” according to United States El Niño Impacts from the NOAA. “The most reliable of these signals (the one that has been observed most frequently) is wetterthan-average conditions along the Gulf Coast from Texas to Florida during this 6-month period. This relationship has occurred during more than 80% of the El Niño events in the past 100 years.”

Strong El Niños can also increase moisture in the Southwest and California.

“Eventually, atmospheric disruptions associated with El Niño will begin to take over U.S. weather patterns. When that happens — almost certainly later this year — there will be an increasing likelihood of ENSO-related precipitation enhancement across the southern tier of the U.S., including the southern Great Plains,” Rippey said.

Conversely, El Niño typically brings more dryness and warmer winters to other parts of the U.S.

“Later in the year, when El Niño rules the roost, there are indications that drought will be a concern in parts of the northern U.S.,” Rippey explained. “Current precipitation forecasts from the National Weather Service suggest that autumn 2023 drought concerns will be greatest in the Northwest, with dryness possibly expanding eastward into the Great Lakes region by late winter and early spring of 2024.”

In the meantime, NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center forecasts widespread temperature increases for the majority of the nation throughout the summer.

Herd expansion chances

When major beef cow states heal from drought, national herd expansion will have a chance to begin. Those states include the five with the most beef cows: Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri, Nebraska and Kansas.

There were 28.9 million beef cows in the United States when this year began, according to the USDA Cattle report. That was fewer than the same time a year earlier, representing the smallest U.S. beef cow herd in decades. Much of the ongoing herd liquidation is driven by drought.

NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center forecasts improving moisture conditions with drought lessening in parts of the U.S. — ending in parts of the High Plains — as the nation moves toward the cold season.

“I would say over the last month we have seen a reduction in the severity of drought,” Blasi said of Kansas. “I just spoke with a producer this morning, and he said their grass conditions were good and they had some rain in their ponds. I spoke with this same producer six weeks ago, and he was selling females.”

Blasi explained prolonged drought meant producers were paying record high prices for hay — about $180 per ton for round bales of prairie hay and as much as $300 per ton in western Kansas for grinding alfalfa.

“I would expect that as El Niño-related precipitation patterns become fully established during the 202324 cold season, percentages of both hay and cattle in drought should decrease nationally on the strength of significant precipitation in key production areas, such as the southern Great Plains,” Rippey said.

WEATHER 22 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Hereford.org August 2023 | 23

WHEN: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2023

WHERE: AT THE FARM, NEWBURGH, ON

WHAT: DONORS, CHOICE LOT PAIRS, BRED HEIFERS, BULL AND HEIFER CALVES

ELWYN, DONALD AND PAULINE EMBURY

Newburgh, ON Main Office: 613-378-6632

Donald Cell: 613-328-9065 Cattle Office: 613-378-2701 rivervalleyherefords.com

SALE MANAGED BY: T Bar C Cattle Co. Ltd.

Chris: 519-374-3335

Ben: 519-374-3335

Shane: 403-363-9973

View the catalogue online at BuyAgro.com

GLENLEES AXA EVOLVE ET 112J NJW 11B 6589 AUTHORITY 57G NJW 160B 028X HISTORIC 81E ET NJW 139C 103C RIDGE 254G HP INNISFAIL WHR X651/723 4013 ET NJW 79Z 199B COW BOSS 113H ET PROGENY AND SERVICES SELL! 24 | August 2023 Hereford.org
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 At the ranch in Minden, Nevada G enoa L ivestock Office 775-782-3336 Bob Coker 916-539-1987 | Chris Beck 618-367-5397 info@genoalivestock.com WWW.GENOALIVESTOCK.COM “a BaLanced approach to performance hereford Genetics” Bull & Female Sale SELLING 55 BULLS & 15 FEMALES FROM THE HEART OF OUR HERD 2 P.M. | MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2023 Noon: Live viewing of sale cattle and buffet lunch 2 PM: Live Auction Video Sale Rick Machado, Auctioneer Online bidding also available via 5 PM: Dinner & Live Entertainment Sale cattle delivered within 500 miles Cattle can remain at GL for 60 days, no charge Find us on Facebook! GENOA G16 GENESIS 22178 ET | REG# 44343446 BW 2.1 WW 73 YW 120 Marb 0.33 REA 0.73 CHB 174 ENOA LIVESTOCK 640 Genoa Lane, Minden, NV 13th annua1 Polled GENOA 173D ENDURE 22117 ET | REG# 44331523 BW 4.2 WW 76 YW 127 Marb 0.33 REA 1.02 CHB 201 Polled GENOA HIGH NOON 22063 ET | REG# 44331446 BW 1.4 WW 65 YW 95 Marb 0.28 REA 0.57 CHB 134 Polled GENOA 8094 BELLE HEIR 22140 ET | REG# 44336161 BW 2.4 WW 69 YW 112 Marb 0.28 REA 0.48 CHB 155 GENOA HIGH NOON 22055 ET | REG# 44331444 BW 2.8 WW 61 YW 94 Marb 0.18 REA 0.50 CHB 130 Horned Horned GENOA 8339F HIGH NOON 22217 | REG# 44347021 BW 3.4 WW 68 YW 110 Marb 0.36 REA 1.10 CHB 175 Horned Hereford.org August 2023 | 25

Up and Then Some

Market conditions suggest cattle price strength for an extended period.

No matter how stubborn the beads on your own abacus, cattle prices continue to run higher and faster than many anticipated. Given what appears to be ongoing beef cow herd liquidation and the dearth of replacement heifers, this is only a prelude of markets to come.

“We’re 18 to 24 months from the price highs,” says Lance Zimmerman, senior protein analyst at RaboBank. “The expansion timeline is currently similar to 2012. We haven’t begun to retain heifers. We still have our foot firmly on the gas pedal of beef cow slaughter.”

Likewise, Dave Weaber, protein analyst for Terrain believes the peak in the current price cycle comes in 2025-26, a year later than he anticipated originally.

“We expect further tightening of feeder cattle and calf supplies during the second half of 2023. Improving moisture conditions across much of the Central Plains and West combined with now-record fed cattle prices have feedyards chasing replacement cattle and driving prices markedly higher,” Weaber explains.

In June, Weaber and Terrain forecasted the 2023 price range for feeder steers (700-900 pounds, Central Plains and West) at $235-$270 per hundredweight (cwt.) Price

projections for fall-delivery steer calves (500-600 pounds) were $275-$300, depending on quality.

By way of comparison, USDA’s Economic Research Service (ERS) pegged the third-quarter feeder steer price (750-800 pounds, Oklahoma City) at $224 per cwt. in the June Livestock, Dairy and Poultry Outlook. ERS forecast the fourth-quarter price at $226 for a 2023 average price of $210.62. Next year’s annual average price was projected to be $226.50.

On the other end of the scale, ERS projected the fed steer price (five-area direct) to be $173 in the third quarter and $174 in the fourth quarter for an annual average of $171.73. Next year’s annual average price was forecast to be $180.

Weaber explains cash fed cattle prices (five-area direct) were record high in the second quarter this year, exceeding prices at the peak of the last cycle. He points out part of the strength in fed cattle prices came from a couple of novel factors.

One was the new sow housing and handling requirements (Prop 12) that became law in California on July 1. Weaber explains the new regulations mean there is a significant shortfall of ‘compliant’ pork to serve the state’s consumers. Retail grocers and food service outlets scrambled to fill the void with beef and poultry.

“We expect wholesale beef and fed cattle prices to overperform our previous expectations as California meat demand transitions and must compete with the rest of the market for beef supplies amid an already tightening supply situation,” Weaber says.

At the same time Weaber points to growing demand for beef fat to use in producing renewable biodiesel. “If renewable diesel demand for fat continues, cattle will have more value, and we will have another product to sell at or above the cost of gain,” Weaber says.

Katelyn McCullock, Livestock Marketing Information Center director and senior economist, expects cattle prices to approach where they were during the previous cyclical

MARKETS
26 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Increased competition for fewer cattle will be the rule for a while as the national herd finds the cyclical trough. These Hereford and baldy feeders were selling at Mitchell Livestock Auction, Mitchell, S.D.

summit in 2014. She notes peak prices last time only lasted for about a quarter; high prices for about two years.

“I wouldn’t be surprised to see a pattern similar to last time, and it could be longer this time because of the number of heifers in the feedlot,” McCullock says.

At the same time, McCullock explains, “We will continue to be concerned about demand destruction. Everything is so much more expensive today. You have to wonder when consumers will show more price fatigue.”

Given the likely extended horizon for herd rebuilding, Weaber believes expansion could occur at a more manageable pace than the last time, without the steep short-lived price spike followed by a hard fall. Instead, prices could remain elevated for longer.

Expansion road bumps

“This kind of price activity is expected to further drive expansion plans at many cow-calf operations and create even tighter feeder cattle and calf supplies,” according to Weaber. “We expect feeder cattle and calf supplies outside of feedyards to be down 5% to 7% during the second half of 2023. The reduction is a function of 4% fewer beef cows calving and 5% fewer beef replacement heifers expected to calve in 2023 combined with accelerating beef replacement heifer calf retention at the ranch level.”

Even so, key factors in the current market are starkly different than conditions in the 2014-15 time period that so many want to equate to currently reality.

McCullock explains the U.S. economy was emerging from a soft, shallow recession (2011). The domestic economy was expanding as herd rebuilding began, interest rates remained historically low and there was little inflationary impact. The opposite is true for all of those today.

Start with interest rates. The prime rate was 3.25% in the heart of 2014 when expansion began last time, according to Zimmerman. Today, it is 8.25%. In broad terms, he says the 5% increase in interest rates equates to about $500-$550 more interest rate expense in a bred heifer purchased today than about a decade ago (see Replacements — How High is Too High?).

“We need to ask ourselves how a higher interest rate affects not only expansion but how it affects the attitude toward taking risk, be it retaining cattle through the feedlot or building and remodeling facilities,” Zimmerman says.

Speaking of which, some producers are nearing retirement; others of a certain age could view the high-price environment as an historical opportunity to exit the business.

Thinking about cattle businesses ceasing or changing generational hands, Zimmerman says, “It’s also the transfer of knowledge and networks.” He encourages younger producers to consider intentionally seeking out those who have been successful over a lifetime and seeking their knowledge.

Weaber expects the industry to rebuild beef production during the coming expansion phase, but likely with fewer cows. That’s possible due to the average annual growth in carcass weights that has occurred for decades and shows no signs of slowing. Markets continue to incentivize heavier carcasses, while technology and management prowess provide the means.

However, while still too early to know, Zimmerman says consumer beef demand the past couple of years, and so far in 2023, sets the stage to begin considering if an overall demand shift is occurring. In other words, could the efforts by producers and the collective industry across decades have pushed the demand curve forward in such a way that some of the old rules no longer apply or apply differently? For instance, as McCullock mentioned above, many economists continue to expect consumers to trade down within their beef purchases or substitute more lower-priced competing proteins. That has occurred historically, but not this time, so far.

“If demand has truly shifted, are we at a time where we can support more beef operations?” Zimmerman wonders.

Navigating the road ahead

“Everyone wants to know when the peak prices will come. It’s more important, to me, to know when prices will stop increasing,” McCullock says.

Part of that has do with higher input costs today and likely narrower margins compared to a decade ago. Plus, McCullock notes, “The last five years have shown us there are a lot of shocks we can’t anticipate.”

“We are operating in an environment that is increasingly more volatile than ever before, from moonshot rallies to drought,” Zimmerman says. “We have to be more agile. We need a business plan, but we also need to invest in things that give us the opportunity to pivot. If we overcommit to a single plan it could sink us.”

Likewise, McCullock encourages producers to identify ways of increasing operational flexibility, be it figuring out ways to cut hay cost or increase marketing options.

“You need to be a low-cost producer all of the time. Once those pennies get away, they don’t come back,” Weaber says.

Everyone wants to know when the peak prices will come. It’s more important, to me, to know when prices will stop increasing.
Hereford.org August 2023 | 27
— Katelyn McCullock, Livestock Marketing Information Center

Your herd is covered.

On the ranch, you make decisions using visual appraisal every day. But what about the traits you don’t see? That’s where NEOGEN’s® GGP comes into play. We’ve loaded the most informative markers and filled in the gaps to provide you with the most complete and powerful seedstock selection tool in the industry.

So, you can be sure those lines in the tag are working overtime for you to provide confidence in selection decisions that help bolster your reputation amongst your herd and customers for generations to come.

GGP’s markers have you covered and informed. Leverage GGP today by contacting your breed association or go to genomics.neogen.com/en/ggp-beef

28 | August 2023 Hereford.org
© NEOGEN Corporation, 2020. NEOGEN is a registered trademark of NEOGEN Corporation.

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Hereford.org August 2023 | 29

Quality and Carloads

Buyer interest grows for Hereford-influenced feeders.

Offer load lots of Hereford and Hereford-sired baldy calves and feeder cattle to buyers, and they sell for as much or more than any same-class cattle in the market. A growing number of Hereford-influenced calf sales underscore the fact.

So far in 2023, more than 8,000 head have sold through six sales in six states.

“When you look at the growing numbers of cattle marketed through these sales and the price averages relative to the overall market, there’s no question more buyers are finding value in these Hereford and Hereford-influenced calves and feeder cattle,” says Trey Befort, American Hereford Association (AHA) director of commercial programs.

Some of these sales are organized and managed by individual auction markets in areas where Hereford use is prevalent and supported by Hereford breeders.

“The reason we’re doing this Herford-influenced sale is because we’ve had some exceptional sets of Herefords come through our barn. When they come through, they’re bell ringers and can really go right up there with the best of the blacks,” explains Jarrid Herrmann, owner and manager of Cherokee Sales Co. (CSC), Cherokee, Okla. “We said, ‘Let’s offer something that you can kind of see is becoming a thing of the future.’ I feel like I need to

get in on this thing, and it’s providing an opportunity to not only market great Hereford cattle, but also be a part of something bigger.”

CSC hosted its first Hereford-influenced sale this year. However, Herrmann also now owns Mitchell Livestock Auction in South Dakota where Hereford-influenced calf and feeder cattle sales have been a successful staple for years. Hereford breeders organized the first Mitchell sale and continue to drive its development.

around my area buy good bulls. They know good cattle, and it proves when you lay your eyes on them in this sale ring. We’ll sell several black baldies too.

“… I keep telling the guys with the black cow herds that they need to put a Hereford bull on them. It’s going to put more value in your calves when you sell them across the scale with a little more hybrid vigor. They’re absolutely going to add 25 to 50 more pounds to those calves.”

Besides the quality of the cattle, Lowderman explains, selling load lots enables the cattle to capture top prices.

together to put loads together for feedyards and for slaughter,” says Rudy Pooch, NHA general manager. “The great quality of cattle here runs parallel with the breeders who manage them, the breeders who raise them. That’s why there’s a premium here. At the end of the day, the buyers follow that. They know they can get carloads together and that gives them better bang for their buck.”

What buyers want

Genetic potential brings the buyers. Stringent health protocols established by individual sales adds buying confidence.

Brent Lowderman and his family’s Carthage Livestock Inc. at Carthage, Ill., hosted their first Greater Midwest Hereford-Influenced Feeder Calf sale in 2007. There were about 300 head in the first sale. It has grown by 200-300 head every year since with consignors from eight states.

“I’ve said it for years here, as far as the quality of cattle that will run through this ring, I will put these Hereford genetics up against any black cattle in America,” Lowderman says. “These guys

“You don’t have a guy or guys showing up in a truck and trailer and buying a gooseneck-load of cattle to feed out anymore,” Lowderman explains. “They absolutely have to be load-lot cattle to get the true top dollar.”

As alluded to, some Hereford-influenced sales are organized by Hereford breeders providing additional marketing avenues to their bull customers, while also serving the interest of buyers.

One example is Burwell Livestock Market’s inaugural Hereford-influence sale held last year in Nebraska. It was organized by the Nebraska Hereford Association (NHA).

“This was definitely membership driven, coming

“There’s very few Hereford cattle that I’ll pass up if I get the opportunity,” says Tom Bedwell who owns and manages Bedwell Feeders at Medicine Lodge, Kan., and also serves as an order buyer. “The quality of cattle has really improved the last 10 years.”

Closeouts of recent pens of straightbred Herefords offer a sterling example of the potential attracting buyers. One notable pen of steers and heifers from Reed Polled Herefords, Clifton, Kan., graded 97.6% USDA Choice and Prime (10% Prime). They were fed at HRC Feed Yards, Scott City, Kan., as part of the Hereford Feedout Program (see below). One of the steers placed fourth overall in the storied, highly competitive Beef Empire Days contest at Garden City, Kan. The steer

As far as the quality of cattle that will run through this ring, I will put these Hereford genetics up against any black cattle in America.
MARKETS 30 | August 2023 Hereford.org
— Brent Lowderman, Carthage Livestock Inc.

hung up a Prime carcass with a Yield Grade of 2.66.

Lee Mayo, HRC Feed Yards general manager, notes one of the packer representatives at the contest pointed out that based on carcass maturity, the steer was also one of the youngest in the competition.

“The data has been invaluable. It shows us that our cattle are on the right track, and the genetics are truly doing what they say they will do,” says Darrin Reed of Reed Polled Herefords. “This was the fourth year we participated in the Hereford Feedout Program, and we’ve made more money than we ever did selling at the sale barn. I highly recommend participating in the AHA Feedout program.”

Documenting potential

The recently concluded winter-spring Hereford Feedout program included more than 1,400 head of Hereford and Herefordinfluenced feeder cattle from 94 participants in 22 states. The numbers encompass the Hereford Feedout Program and the National Junior Hereford Association (NJHA) Fed Steer Shootout.

The Hereford Feedout Program offers Hereford breeders and commercial users of Hereford genetics an opportunity to send a few head or entire pens to HRC Feed Yards. Participants receive ongoing updates about how their cattle are performing while on feed and then receive individual carcass data along with a collective summary of all cattle enrolled in the program to see how their cattle performed relative to the entire group.

“Every year, we see increased interest in these programs from our members and their customers because

of the value they find in benchmarking feedlot and carcass performance in their programs and then tracking subsequent performance relative to their benchmark,” Befort says.

Growing interest in the program led AHA to offer an added feeding period each year.

“The value of this information and being more closely engaged with the cattle feeding sector has always been important. It is becoming invaluable as more cattle are channeled into specification-based, valueadded areas of the supply chain,” Befort says.

Hereford-influence Feeder Sales

Faith Livestock Auction Hereford

Influence Grass Cattle/Yearling Special

Date: Aug. 21, 2023

Location: Faith Livestock Auction – Faith, SD

Contact: 605-967-2200

Ogallala Livestock Yearling Special

featuring Hereford & Red Angus Section

Date: Sept. 28, 2023

Location: Ogallala Livestock Auction MarketOgallala, NE

Contact: 308-284-2071

Aberdeen Livestock Sales Co.

Hereford Influenced Yearling Special

Date: Oct. 9, 2023

Location: Aberdeen Livestock Sales Co. –Aberdeen, SD

Contact: Kevin Larson, 605-225-2062

Faith Livestock Auction Hereford

Influence Feeder Calf Special

Date: Oct. 16, 2023

Location: Faith Livestock Auction – Faith, SD

Contact: 605-967-2200

Ogallala Livestock Calf Special

featuring Hereford & Red Angus Section

Date: Oct. 26, 2023

Location: Ogallala Livestock Auction MarketOgallala, NE

Contact: 308-284-2071

Cherokee Sales Co.

Hereford-influenced Calf Special

Date: Nov. 15, 2023

Location: Cherokee Sales, Co. - Cherokee, Okla.

Contact: Jarrid Herrmann, 785-564-0869

Tennessee Hereford Marketing

Program Feeder Calf Sale

Date: Nov. 15, 2023

Location: United Producers Columbia Livestock

Center - Columbia, Tenn.

Contact: Richard Brown, 931-239-9785

For more information about participating in the Hereford Feedout Program, please see Hereford.org/genetics/breedimprovement/feedout-program For a listing of upcoming Hereford-influenced feeder calf sales, visit Hereford.org/commercial/ programs/feeder-cattle-sales/

Nebraska Hereford Assn. Hereford Influence Sale

Date: Nov. 17, 2023

Location: Burwell Livestock Market – Burwell, Neb.

Contact: Trevor Toelle, 308-214-1543

Kansas Hereford Assn. Feeder Calf and Female Sale

Date: Dec. 13, 2023

Location: Parsons Livestock Auction - Parsons, Kan.

Contact: Wade Dillinger, 620-421-2900

Kentucky Hereford Assn. Certified

Hereford-influenced Feeder Calf Sale

Date: Dec. 14, 2023

Location: Blue Grass Stockyards - Lexington, Ky.

Contact: L.W. Beckley, DVM, 859-779-1419

Premium Whiteface Feeder Calf Sale hosted by MN Hereford Breeders

Date: Dec. 14, 2023

Location: Pipestone Livestock Auction MarketPipestone, Minn. Contact: 507-825-3306

Aberdeen Livestock Sales Co.

Hereford Influenced Feeder Special

Date: Dec. 18, 2023

Location: Aberdeen Livestock Sales Co. –Aberdeen, SD

Contact: Kevin Larson, 605-225-2062

Cherokee Sales Co.

Hereford-influenced Calf Special

Date: Dec. 20, 2023

Location: Cherokee Sales, Co.- Cherokee, Olka. Contact: Jarrid Herrmann, 785-564-0869

For more information about these sales, please contact the representatives noted above. For a listing of sales including those scheduled for 2024, please see Hereford.org/commercial/ programs/feeder-cattle-sales/

Hereford.org August 2023 | 31
32 | August 2023 Hereford.org
51ST ANNUAL PRODUCTION BULL SALE 4134 County Hwy. 30 • Horton, AL 35980 Glynn Debter 205-429-3553 Perry Debter 205-429-4415 John Ross Debter 205-429-2040 debterfarm@otelco.net • www.debterherefordfarm.com Saturday • October 28, 2023 • 12:00 Noon At the farm in Horton, Alabama SELLING: 90 2-year-old Hereford Bulls • 40 Hereford Females • 120 Commercial Females Hereford.org August 2023 | 33

Market Tracks

Cattle prices stretch higher.

Thinning cattle supplies coupled with resilient consumer beef demand continue to push prices higher and faster than earlier expectations.

Feeder steer prices (600700 pounds) at the start of July were $61-$71 per hundredweight (cwt.) higher year over year on a regional basis — up 30-40% — according to USDA’s National Weekly Feeder and Stocker Cattle Summary (see Table). More broadly, the CME Feeder Cattle Index was

$231.41 the last day of June, up about 40% year over year.

The weekly average fivearea direct fed steer price began July at $181.33 per cwt. on a live basis. At least on a nominal basis, the price reached a new record high in April at $173.10. Since then, it has climbed as high as $188.75.

Beef consumers stay hooked Wholesale beef values, although beginning their seasonal descent in late June, remain at historically high

levels. The weekly Choice beef cutout value was $329.19 per cwt. the last week of June, up 24% year over year. Retail beef prices follow the same pattern with the monthly retail Choice beef price average in May at $8.08 per pound. So far, consumer beef demand remains steadfast and more resilient than previous history would suggest.

Of course, prices continue to increase for many meat and food items but at a more moderate pace than last year,

according to the latest Food Price Outlook from USDA’s Economic Research Service. For instance, food at home prices were 0.1% higher month to month in May and 5.8% higher year over year. Year-to-date prices were 4.7% more than the same time last year when food at home prices were 11.4% more year over year.

Likewise, although U.S. beef exports this year are less than last year’s record levels, international demand continues to underpin support.

MARKETS 34 | August 2023 Hereford.org

April beef export value per head of fed slaughter was $441.70, the highest since last July, according to data released by USDA and compiled by the U.S. Meat Export Federation. Weekly national carcass premiums and discounts also underscore consumer desire for the highest grading beef. Although less than the previous year, Prime carcasses were bringing $14.72 per cwt. more than premium Choice (upper two-thirds) the first week of July. Premium Choice was bringing $4.83 more than Choice. Select grading carcasses were discounted $28.31 per cwt., relative to Choice; the discount was $7.26 more than the previous year.

Beef cow liquidation continues Plenty more price strength is on the horizon — barring

Estimated cattle slaughter

some other confounding black swan event — as cattle numbers decline.

The U.S. beef cow herd at the beginning of 2023 was the smallest since 1962, according to Derrell Peel, Extension livestock marketing specialist at Oklahoma State University (OSU), providing market insights at the recent Cattlemen’s Conference at OSU.

By all accounts, national beef cow liquidation continues. Yearling fed heifer slaughter remains elevated, albeit less so than last year.

Through the end of June, estimated year-to-date total cattle slaughter was 580,000 head fewer (-3.4% than the same time a year earlier. Estimated year-to-date beef production was 640 million pounds less (-4.6%).

Estimated beef production

1AMS National Weekly Feeder & Stocker Cattle Summary, weeks ending 7/01/23

2CME Feeder Cattle Index year over year 06/30/23

3USDA Five-area weekly weighted average direct slaughter cattle (negotiated), for the week ending 07/02/23

4National Weekly Boxed Beef Cutout and Boxed Beef Cuts (negotiated, weekly cutout value summary), weekly average for 06/26 to 06/30/23 and 06/27 to 07/01/22

5USDA steer byproduct drop value (FOB central U.S.), 07/05/22 and 07/05/23

6National Weekly five area direct slaughter cattle premiums and discounts, weighted average week of 07/05/22 and 07/03/23

7Meat Price Spreads, Choice beef values and spreads and all fresh beef retail value, USDA ERS; monthly values, cents per pound of retail equivalent (May 2022 and May 2023), cents per pound

8U.S. Meat Export Foundation data — YTD January-April 2022 and 2023

9CME futures 06/30/23 year over year

10 WTI-CME 06/30/23 year over year

11Estimated weekly meat production under federal inspection, year to date 07/01/23

Last year million head This year million head Change thousand head Total cattle slaughter11 16.88 16.30 -580,000 (-3.4%) Last year billion lbs. This year billion lbs. Change million lbs. Total beef production11 13.97 13.33 -640.0 (-4.6%) Last year $/cwt. This year $/cwt. Change $/cwt. Regional Feeder Steer Prices1 North Central 600-700 lbs. 211.29 273.06 61.77 (+29.2%) 700-800 lbs. 185.53 252.56 67.03 (+36.1%) 800-900 lbs. 172.93 234.88 61.95 (+35.8%) South Central 500-600 lbs. 192.39 265.44 73.05 (+38.0%) 600-700 lbs. 178.53 249.65 71.12 (+39.8%) 700-800 lbs. 166.84 234.66 67.82 (+40.6%) Southeast 400-500 lbs. 175.61 244.55 68.94 (+39.2%) 500-600 lbs. 169.27 235.60 66.33 (+39.2%) 600-700 lbs. 161.13 225.16 64.03 (+39.7%) CME Feeder Cattle Index2 165.67 231.41 65.74 (+39.7%) Average Five-area Direct3 Live steer (FOB) 146.16 181.33 35.17 (+24.1%) Dressed steer (Del) 233.96 289.34 55.38 (+23.7%) Live heifer (FOB) 144.05 180.65 36.60 (+25.4%) Dressed heifer (Del) 234.09 289.76 55.67 (+23.8%) Wholesale Beef Prices4 Choice cutout value 265.70 329.19 63.49 (+23.9%) Select cutout value 242.08 297.12 55.04 (+22.7%) Byproduct value5 13.95 13.22 -0.73 (-5.2%) Average weekly slaughter premiums and discounts6 Prime over Choice 18.29 14.72 -3.57 (-19.5%) Premium Choice over Choice 4.45 4.83 0.38 (+8.5%) Select under Choice -21.05 -28.31 -7.26 (-34.5%) Retail beef prices7 Choice beef Retail Value 767.5 808.2 40.7 (+5.3%) All fresh beef Retail Value 737.4 750.2 12.8 (+1.7%) U.S. beef exports8 Value per head Fed slaughter 478.03 389.53 -88.50 (-18.5%) Futures prices9 Feeder Cattle Aug 173.600 247.575 73.975 (+42.6%) Sep 176.225 250.825 74.600 (+42.3%) Live Cattle Aug ‘23 147.725 177.175 29.450 (+19.9%) Oct ‘23 151.325 179.550 28.225 (+18.6%) Corn Jly ‘23 6.274 5.544 -0.730 (-11.6%) Sep ‘23 5.972 4.884 -1.088 (-18.2%) Crude Oil10 Aug ‘23 105.76 70.64 -35.12 (-33.2%) Hereford.org August 2023 | 35
BreedingChampion LIKE A AUTUMN ALLIANCE XLI Sunday, September 17, 2023 12:00 noon at the farm Lois McAughey (905) 625-315 1 (Office) (705) 326-6889 (Farm) (416) 346-0657 (Cell) Kevin Brown (705) 330-4663 (Cell) www.medontehighlands.com Farm located 3 miles west of Orillia Sale managed by T Bar C Cattle Co. Ltd. 523 Main Street, Warman SK S0K 4S0 P: 306.933.4200 F: 306.934.0744 BUYAGRO.COM TBARC.COM PLAN AN ONTARIO WEEKEND! River Valley “Genetic Design” Sale - September 15, 2023 Elm-Lodge Sale - September 16, 2023 AUTUMN ALLIANCE SALE XVI - September 17, 2023 MHPH ABBY 240J Lady 124L MEDIA x EVOLUTION EPDs BWWWYWMMTM 2.964.299.632.264.3 MHPH GL 240J Daisy 115L MEDIA x RIMROCK EPDs BWWWYWMMTM 2.763.299.131.463.0 RW MHPH 240J Legacy 102L MEDIA x AMERICAN CLASSIC EPDs BWWWYWMMTM 5.170.3110.031.666.8 MHPH 240J Temptress 102L MEDIA x ROYAL EPDs BWWWYWMMTM 4.567.7110.630.164.0 MHPH MH 240J Karen 1021L MEDIA x UMPIRE EPDs BWWWYWMMTM 3.669.5107.629.464.2 MHPH 240J Deanna 1121L MEDIA x RED BARON EPDs BWWWYWMMTM 4.073.6120.532.769.5 EPDs BWWWYWMMTM 3.277.7122.835.674.5 2022 CANADIAN NATIONAL GRAND CHAMPION BULL SILVER TROPHY AWARD WINNER Owned by Medonte Highlands Polled Herefords, Abby Hill Farms, Tennessee River Music Inc., Kevin D. Jensen, and Roots & Wings Farms KJ MHPH RW 364C Media 240J ET MEDONTE HIGHLANDS POLLED HEREFORDS 36 | August 2023 Hereford.org

September 23, 2003 • Noon

High Prairie Farms • Fair Grove, MO

Featuring High Prairie Farms Mature Cow Herd Dispersal

9 Show-Me Select qualified spring bred commercial heifers sell!

Sired by LT Standard Lad 175C (43731325) and JAK L1 Domino D551 (43751063), out of purebred Angus and Hereford cows.

Bred AI to AW Statesman 038H (44177977) and pasture exposed to FTF Frontier 006H (44123207).

P43821645 • Calved: 04/04/2017 Fall calving flush cow with several daughters that will sell. P43603146 • Calved: 04/17/2015 Fall calving flush cow that has a 10Y daughter. We are currently using two of her sons in our herd. P43609538 • Calved: 01/30/2015 Fall calving flush cow that has two outstanding Pilgrim daughters that will sell the 23rd. Be sure to look them up.
View and Bid Online Follow us on Facebook! 417’s Finest Hereford Female Sale For catalog or more information contact Ellen Mason 417-827-0338 • emason@alumni.iastate.edu • Auctioneer: Mark C. Sims 580-595-0901
Hereford.org August 2023 | 37
P44465135 • Calved: 1/5/2022 Spring calving bred heifer

Simplify Multi-trait Selection

Indexes account for economics and breeding objectives.

Economic selection indexes offer commercial producers a powerful opportunity to select bulls for specific production scenarios without having to consider individual expected progeny differences (EPDs).

Consider the sheer number of EPDs. As an example, the American Hereford Association (AHA) calculates EPDs for 17 different traits. Next, think about the natural antagonisms existing between traits such as growth and calving ease. Making genetic improvement in specific areas without sacrificing gains in others can be challenging. That’s why selection indexes are so useful.

In simple terms, these indexes provide a single, economically weighted value aimed at breeding objectives for specific production scenarios. They account for multiple and antagonistic traits for each scenario.

Baldy Maternal Index

For instance, the American Hereford Association (AHA) Baldy Maternal Profit Index (BMI$) is a maternally focused index for producers breeding registered Hereford bulls to Angus cows. It assumes some daughters are retained as replacements in the herd and the remainder of the calf crop is finished and marketed on a quality-based grid.

Essentially, all traits are important in this scenario, but Sustained Cow Fertility (SCF) is clearly the driver when you look at the average EPDs and percentile rankings for the top 20 active BMI$ sires in the Hereford breed (Table 1).

SCF is a longevity trait, which predicts a sire’s ability to produce daughters that last longer in the herd. A

cow that lasts longer in a commercial herd is going to bring more revenue back to the operation. So, it makes sense that this trait tops the list of importance for commercial producers building sought after F1 black baldy females.

Along with SCF, Weaning Weight (WW), Mature Cow Weight (MCW) and Milk (MM) are weighted slightly positively in the BMI$, ensuring females have adequate growth without increasing inputs. There is some negative emphasis on Dry Matter Intake (DMI), but a positive emphasis on Carcass Weight (CW), aimed at enhancing profitability from finishing nonreplacement females and castrated males. Marbling (MARB) and Ribeye Area (REA) are also positively weighted with Certified Hereford Beef® (CHB) success in mind.

The top 20 BMI$ bulls are also above breed average for all other traits in the index, except for Yearling Weight (YW) and Backfat (FAT), which are slightly below breed average. Arguably, moderate growth and more fleshing ability (FAT) make sense when producing females that last longer in production.

Consider the suite of traits utilized in the BMI$ (Table 1) and the percentile rankings of EPDs for the top 20 BMI$ bulls. Think about the genetic merit of the black baldy females these bulls will sire — efficient, moderate mature size, high-quality udder and carcass traits beyond breed average.

GENETICS
TraitCE BWWW YW DMISCSCFMilkM&GMCEMCWUDDRTEAT CWT FAT REAMARBBMIBIICHB EPD 8.50.554860.141.430.539665.7621.41.5680.0350.440.32571666135 % Rank 151560604020 15 152015101055705015 11 25
Table 1: Average EPD Values for the Top 20 Active Sires for BMI$ as of June 6, 2023
Selection
indexes help producers more simply and consistently place selection pressure on economically relevant traits that drive profitability in specific production systems.
38 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Shane Bedwell is the chief operating officer and director of breed improvement of the American Hereford Association. He can be reached at sbedwell@hereford.org.

In theory, using the index value (expressed as dollars) enables selection of bulls with appropriate levels of performance in all traits used in the index. Again, selection indexes assume specific production systems, so the economic weighting of each trait is different among indexes.

Other Hereford indexes

AHA offers two other economic selection indexes — the Brahman Influence Index (BII$) and Certified Hereford Beef® Index (CHB$).

The Brahman Influence Index (BII$) is also a maternally focused index based on a production system using BrahmanHereford-cross cows. Progeny of these cows are directed toward a commodity beef market, since CHB does not accept Brahman-influenced cattle. This index is similar in trait weighting to BMI$, but there is more emphasis on SCF and MARB. This is an all-purpose index where F1 females are retained; remaining cull progeny are marketed through commodity-based programs.

The Certified Hereford Beef Index (CHB$) is a terminal sire index that is built around a production system where Hereford bulls are mated to mature commercial Angus cows and all progeny will be targeted for CHB after the finishing phase. This index has significant weight on CW and MARB to ensure profit on the rail. As well, there is a positive weighting for Average Daily Gain along with a negative weighting on DMI to ensure efficient pounds of growth in the feedyard. In addition, there is a positive weighting for REA and a negative weighting for FAT to maintain desirable USDA Yield Grades. This is the only index that has no emphasis on fertility. Remember that no replacement heifers are being retained.

Bottom line, selection indexes help producers more simply and consistently place selection pressure on economically relevant traits that drive profitability in specific production systems.

Value-added commercial opportunities

AHA selection indexes also serve as the cornerstone to several programs designed to help commercial producers select Hereford seedstock and to market subsequent progeny. AHA economic selection indexes serve as genetic qualifiers for these programs since commercial cattle profitability is the basic premise of these indexes.

Examples of economic index values:

CHB$

Sire A: $130

Sire B: $100

Difference: $30

BMI$

Sire A: $450

Sire B: $300

Difference: $150

Explanation — Sire A will sire progeny that should be $30 more profitable when fed out and marketed on a dual-based grid when compared to the progeny of Sire B, if comparably mated.

Explanation — Sire A will sire daughters that are $150 more profitable over their lifetime due to their added longevity and/or their ability to raise more profitable offspring when compared to daughters of Sire B, when comparably mated.

The Premium Red Baldy program is geared toward commercial producers building red baldy females, who select Hereford bulls ranking at or above the top 50% of the breed for BMI$. Also supported by the Red Angus Association of America, this female-only program promotes the storied quality of red baldy females. Qualifying females are recognized with a special tag denoting their genetic promise of additional longevity, docility and profitability.

The Maternal Advantage program is designed for commercial producers selecting Hereford bulls ranking at or above the top 50% of the breed for either BMI$ (Angus-based) or BII$ (Brahman-based). This program also recognizes the added longevity, docitlity and profit potential of the F1 female resulting from crossbreeding Hereford bulls to Angus or Brahman-based females.

For more information about AHA economic selection indexes, please go to Hereford.org/genetics/breed-improvement/traitdefinitions. For more information about AHA commercial programs, please see Hereford.org/commercial/programs.

Hereford Advantage is designed for commercial producers selecting Hereford bulls ranking at or above the top 50% of the breed for CHB$. Progeny from these bulls should be equipped with the necessary feedlot performance, efficiency and end-product merit, to warrant added buyer attention regardless of when they are marketed.

Hereford.org August 2023 | 39

Jim and Beth Herman 6753 C.R. C75 Edgerton, OH 43715 419-212-0093 Jim cell jimbethherman@metalink.net

Rippling Rock Hereford Farm

Tim, Stephanie, Ashleigh and Andrew Osborn 3537 Second Creek Rd. Blanchester, OH 45107

Tim: 937-655-0644

Home: 937-783-2869

timosborn@frontier.com

THF Toby 3H

Selected in 2022 for the NRSP by Olsen Ranches.

TWIN HILLS FARMS

Jeff and Andrea Cramer Apple Creek, OH and Fresno, OH 330-464-1810

jeffcramer@hughes.net

Polled Herefords LLC

Jerry and Mary Ann Berg 16821 Withrich Rd. P.O. Box 224 Dalton, OH 44618 330-857-7967 330-465-6185 cell jwberg@bright.net

Mohican Farms

Conard and Nancy Stitzlein 4551 State Rt. 514 Glenmont, OH 44628

Matt Stitzlein 330-231-0708

Alexis Stitzlein 330-231-9538

lexstitz@gmail.com

Visit us on Facebook Mohican Polled Herefords

J&L Cattle Services

Jeff, Lou Ellen and Keayla Harr 334 Twp. Rd. 1922 Jeromesville, OH 44840

Cell 419-685-0549

jlcattleserv@aol.com

Berlin Heights, OH 44814

Lisa Finnegan Keets, Secretary 440-320-6193 ohioherefordlady@yahoo.com

Brian, Lisa, Jen & Ellie Keets

10708 Main Rd. Berlin Heights, OH 44814

Brian 419-651-0978

Lisa 440-320-6193

ohioherefordlady@yahoo.com

8570 Shannon Rd., Dresden, OH 43821 JEFF JORDAN 740-704-4807 Consigning to the Breeders Cup Sale SEPT. 2, 2023 at Boyd Beef Cattle, Mays Lick, Ky. Selling 12 AI-sired females by: DM All Around 904G ET BG LCC 11B Perfecto 84F TH Masterplan 183F Innisfail WHR X651/723 4013 ET Calved: Aug. 14, 2022 Sire: DM ALL AROUND 904G ET P44405347 J502 Calved: Aug. 19, 2022 Sire: DM ALL AROUND 904G ET P44405351 J503 Calved: Oct. 02, 2022 Sire: BG LCC 11B PERFECTO 84F P44405349 J511 Calved: Jan. 01, 2023 Sire: BG LCC 11B PERFECTO 84F P44440511 J519 Tom, Angie, Tucker, Tanner and Tripp Ostgaard 7602 Pleasant Chapel Rd. Newark, Ohio 937-475-9625 John Ostgaard 4921 Tanner Dr. Dayton, Ohio 937-233-9712 46th Annual Sale May 2024 Rick Van Fleet 740-732-4783 21989 Woodsfield Rd. Sarahsville, OH 43779 rickgreenvalley@gmail.com www.switzerlandpolledherefords.com Polled Hereford Association www.buckeyeherefords.com 10708 Main Rd.
40 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Hereford.org August 2023 | 41

Using Genomic Information to Select Replacements

GE-EPDs can help find the most profitable replacements for your program.

When it comes to making genetic progress in a herd, major decisions are made twice a year — selecting sires and selecting replacement heifers. The importance of genomic information and expected progeny differences (EPDs) when it comes to selecting bulls that will sire more than 20 calves a year is often discussed, but have you ever thought about the impact a female has on your operation? Not only is she likely your most expensive

input cost, but she is also responsible for half of the genetics that contribute to your replacement heifers each year, as well as to the bull prospects developed by seedstock producers. Furthermore, depending on how many replacement heifers you keep out of her, she may have a genetic impact on your herd for years to come.

What is your current protocol for selecting replacements? Age, weight, phenotype, pelvic measurements and genetics

are all important data points to consider. While EPDs cannot replace these things, they can help you better understand each female’s strengths and weaknesses and allow you to better place potential replacement females into their most profitable production scenario. Genomically elite females may become donor dams for seedstock producers, while others may be better suited for someone else’s breeding program.

Likewise, commercial producers harness the power of genomics when they select bulls with genomic-enhanced expected progeny differences (GE-EPDs) and selection indexes. When doing so, it is recommended to also use commercial genomic profiles to help identify genetically superior replacement heifers who inherit the superior DNA from the bulls purchased.

Evaluating replacements

Let’s create a scenario where you have a set of four halfsibling replacement heifers to choose from. All are from the same influential AI sire that you selected for that year. Phenotypically, these females all match your selection criteria, and all were born on the same day. Their biggest differences can then be found in the DNA they inherited from their sire and dam. This could apply to a registered breeder or a commercial operation interpreting a commercial genetic test.

Now, even though they all have the same sire, that doesn’t mean they inherited the same pieces of DNA from him. Even within a sperm cell there are more than 1 billion different combinations of chromosomal inheritance. To show how this occurs in

GENETICS
Animal ID CEWWSCF CW REAMARBBMI$CHB$ Calf A -0.66317.6790.520.23387133 Calf B 4.55223.5660.360.27464127 Calf C 1.45919.6730.470.15404120 Calf D 5.95023.2710.370.33463133 Breed Avg. 3 5515.9690.420.13347118 Calves’ Sire 1.16722.4910.660.33473152 Data reported are real GE-EPDs from AHA, June 16, 2023.
Table 1: Comparison of EPDs for four half-sibling females, including two AHA selection indexes
42 | August 2023 Hereford.org

a real-life example, Table 1 includes American Hereford Association (AHA) GE-EPDs on four half-sibling females, all sired by the same bull. Comparing each heifer’s genetic values can help to differentiate otherwise similar females.

While there are some maternal and terminal traits of interest listed, the table also includes their overall Baldy Maternal Index (BMI$) and Certified Hereford Beef (CHB$) economic index values. These are a representation of their maternal and terminal attributes, respectively. Here is a summary of how each female “measures up” to her siblings.

• Calf A: The highestranking sibling for CHB$, supported by superior EPD values for carcass weight (CW) and

ribeye area (REA). While above average, she is the lowest in the group for BMI$. Given her lower predictions for calving ease (CE) and sustained cow fertility (SCF), it is likely this female would be more profitable in a terminal focused herd.

• Calf B: The highestranking sibling for BMI$, with increased EPD values for CE and SCF. Her lower weaning weight (WW) EPDs correlated to lower terminal traits of interest and a lower CHB$ index value. Although, given her superior EPD for marbling (MARB), if bred to a more terminal bull, this heifer could prove valuable as a replacement.

• Calf C: This heifer just kind of falls “middle of the pack” for both indexes and most of the traits listed above. Her BMI$ value of 404 is above breed average, and she is also above average for CE, WW and SCF. Overall, given the information provided, there is nothing keeping her from being a replacement female.

• Calf D: Compared to her siblings, this heifer won the “genetic lottery.” She has the highest BMI$ and CHB$ values of the group. With her increased EPD values for CE, SCF and MARB she checks all the boxes. Not only would she make a good replacement candidate, but if phenotype and all other criteria aligned, she may even be donor dam material.

It is worth mentioning that this comparison is only meant for example purposes to show how EPDs can be used to make selection decisions. There is a multitude of other traits that are included in the AHA genetic evaluation that may be of large economic importance to an operation. There are also many other breeding programs and ideologies that could take the information provided and make different decisions than the ones discussed above. If you’re reading this and wanting to know how to specifically apply the concepts to your operation, the staff at AHA are more than happy to assist.

Editor’s note: Jamie T. Courter, Ph.D., is a bovine technical services manager for NEOGEN.

MONDAY – SEPT. 4, 2023 – NOON Guests: Church View Farm Great Meadows Show Cattle HP Herefords Black River Farm Oak Creek Farm Stony’s Run Farm Emerson’s Short Bridge Farm Small Town Cattle Co. Hausner Cattle Co. Deep Run Farm South Side Farm 6th Annual Hereford Production Sale•Labor Day Catalogs on request Visitors welcome! Jay and Shelly Stull | 10718-A Liberty Rd., Frederick, MD 21701 301-898-8552 | eastsidehereford@comcast.net Hereford.org August 2023 | 43

Mark

LABOR DAY 2024 SALE SEPT. 2, 2024

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your calendar for David and Paula Parker 129 Banks Rd. Bradyville, TN 37026
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44 | August 2023 Hereford.org

Test to Control

BVD remains a pesky, costly cattle health challenge.

Calves persistently infected (PI) with the bovine viral diarrhea (BVD) virus are the Trojan horse of the beef industry, sneaking the costly virus into cattle operations.

“This virus can cause immune dysfunction; some strains cause the immune system to overreact when cattle are stressed, such as at weaning,” explains Chris Chase, DVM, South Dakota State University. “If calves are subjected to stress and have BVD at the same time, it makes them much more susceptible to any respiratory diseases, coccidiosis or whatever else they might be exposed to.”

Diagnosing BVD without testing is difficult because symptoms often mimic other diseases. BVD can cause abortion, fetal mummification, birth defects and malformations, stillborn full-term calves, PI calves with immune deficiencies, and acute or chronic illness with a variety of signs. This virus is also an indirect cause of many other diseases because it hinders the immune system. Pinkeye, scours and other maladies can occur because BVD lowered the animal’s defenses, allowing another infection to get started.

Types of infection

PI animals are infected in utero as a fetus by a BVD infected dam during early pregnancy. PI animals shed the virus as long as they live.

“Most persistently infected calves don’t live long enough

to become adults, but some do. They continually shed the virus and are super-shedders,” Chase says.

Cattle infected with BVD after birth are regarded as acutely infected or transiently infected (TI). After TI animals clear the infection and recover, they no longer shed the virus.

“Even if cattle are vaccinated, it won’t always protect them,” Chase says. “If some get stressed, their immune response to pathogens may be inadequate. If they have close contact with a PI animal on the day they are stressed, they may become infected.”

While the BVD virus can be transmitted from cattle with BVD (TI), most transmission within herds stem from PI transmission, according to Cheryl Waldner, DVM, University of Saskatchewan. Consequently, she says controlling BVD requires preventing the birth of PI calves.

Testing is key “Doing some blood tests in the cows and measuring antibodies can reveal their immune status. With many diseases, antibody levels are usually not a good indicator of whether or not a herd has been infected, but with BVD, it is,” Chase says. “Antibody levels in an infected animal are much higher than what we’d see with an animal that has been vaccinated.” Taking a few blood samples now and then can be a way to monitor BVD status of a herd.

If your cattle come into contact with other cattle, such as in a community pasture, Chase suggests checking all of your calves the next year by sending ear notch samples to check for BVD.

“You might have had a clean herd, but when a cow is pregnant, if she is exposed to this virus at a certain stage during the first 120 days of gestation, even if she’s been vaccinated, there is still some risk. If she has contact with a PI animal in someone else’s herd, she may be vulnerable,” Chase says.

You probably wouldn’t know her calf is PI unless you test it, according to Waldner.

“You might suspect a calf could be PI if he’s a little smaller and a poor doer, but there can also be calves, young cows or bulls that look healthy and are persistently infected,” Waldner says.

Chase advises producers to test. If they have a relatively closed herd (not much contact or co-mingling with other cattle) it might not be necessary to ear notch all the calves every year.

“But the advantage of testing all calves each year is that the PI animals can be identified and eliminated,” Chase explains.

Biosecurity is crucial, but difficult with community pastures or fence-line contact, especially if your neighbor brings in new animals.

“When you buy new stock, test and quarantine before you add them to your herd,” Chase recommends. “If it’s a

reputable seller who tested the cattle just prior to when you get them — and they don’t go through a sale barn or any place they might be in contact with other animals — you may not need to quarantine them. But if you buy animals you are unsure about, quarantine them for 30 days.”

Chase suggests pulling a blood sample when the animal arrives, quarantining it and then pulling another sample 30 days later.

“If the animal has never been tested, I recommend doing the ear notch when it arrives to make sure it is not PI,” Chase says. “If it’s not PI, a blood sample upon arrival and another one 30 days later will tell if it was exposed and became infected before it got to your place. The virus runs its course, and most animals will clear the virus within 30 days,” he says.

Further, Chase says it is important to take ear notches if there are several unexplained deaths in a herd or feedlot.

“Animals found down or dead might not show anything at necropsy, but could be PI animals,” Chase explains. “Even if you see something else wrong, it’s wise to do an ear notch test to be on the safe side and know whether the animal was PI.

“If you tested the rest of the herd, you might not think there’s a problem if all the animals tested were clean, but if you forget about the one that died (and didn’t have it tested), it could have been a

CATTLE HEALTH 46 | August 2023 Hereford.org

PI, creating some exposure in the herd.”

Keep in mind the number of PI animals in beef herds has increased over the past several years, according to Chase.

“Part of the reason is that we are not monitoring for BVD as much as we did earlier, and there is a strain called BVD1b that may have

BVD Testing Options

become more prevalent,” Chase says. “Most of our vaccines are pretty good against BVDV1a and 2a because those are the two original strains we knew about. Now BVDV1b has emerged, and it’s different. Viruses keep changing and always seem to figure out a way to evade control.”

Work with your herd health veterinarian to assess and manage BVD risk.

“Many people think that if they just vaccinate, everything will be OK. But if you don’t eliminate PI animals, you can’t vaccinate your way out of a BVD problem,” Chase says.

Several tests exist to diagnose BVD (bovine viral diarrhea), according to Gregg Hanzlicek, DVM, Kansas State University Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory. He assists veterinarians investigating complex herd health problems and works with pathologists and microbiologists.

“We are looking for carriers, so the tests we use are looking for the organism itself,” Hanzlicek says.

Immunochemistry is one of the tests. It utilizes tissue samples, chemical reaction and examining the sample microscopically.

“There are also a couple of ELISA (enzyme-linked immunoassay) tests. One is called an antigen-capture ELISA. This test sets up a reaction between the virus in the sample and the antibody to the virus contained in the test kit,” Hanzlicek explains. “If the virus is present, it causes a reaction that can be visually seen. Another ELISA test is the BVD SNAP test. It can be completed chute-side, with results in a few minutes.”

PCR (polymerase chain reaction) represents the most recent testing technology.

“One advantage is that it can quantify the amount of virus in the sample,” Hanzlicek says. “By using the PCR and assessing the number on the test result, we have a good idea whether that animal is a PI (permanently infected) or a TI (transiently infected) animal. But it’s still wise to retest to see if the animal cleared up or is still harboring the virus.”

Next steps

“If you have an animal with a positive test result, you should probably quarantine and retest that animal in three to four weeks because both the ELISA and the PCR find not only the cattle that are persistently infected, but also animals that are transiently infected,” Hanzlicek explains. “Those transiently infected animals will fight off the infection and no longer be shedding any virus, usually within a few weeks.

“People think it’s a hassle to retest in three to four weeks, but it’s best to remove both PI and TI animals from the group. A TI on the retest will be negative; it would then be safe to put those cattle back in the herd. By contrast, PI cattle should be sold to slaughter … whether the virus exposure is coming from a PI or TI makes no difference to the calf or cow that is exposed.”

Test samples can be ear notches or blood.

“Most people submit ear notches because they are easier to collect than a blood sample. Once you ear notch the animals you can also tell by looking at them that they’ve had the BVD test,” Hanzlicek notes.

However, he also says there are cases where unscrupulous sellers ear notch untested cattle to make buyers think the cattle were tested.

Editor’s Note: Heather Smith Thomas and her husband, Lynn, have ranched near Salmon, Idaho, for more than four decades. She also writes cattle articles that appear in numerous U.S. and Canadian cattle publications, including Hereford World. She is the author of numerous books, including “The Cattle Health Handbook.”

“This passes the disease to someone else,” Hanzlicek emphasizes. “Our lab tests loads of calves as they come into the Midwest and some have been found to contain multiple PI calves. In some of these situations you know someone put PI calves together and sold them as a group.”

To pool or not

Pooling diagnostic samples has advantages and disadvantages when sending samples to be tested.

“Typically, people request pooling for PCR tests to reduce cost. Pooling PCR samples can reduce the cost down to the ELISA cost or even less,” Hanzlicek explains.

However, if the lab finds a positive pool, then all animals in the pooled group must be re-tested to find the BVD-positive animals. So, he says don’t pool samples unless you are sure there are few, if any, PI animals represented.

“If you know there might be PI animals, request the test be completed individually or in small groups of six,” Hanzlicek suggests.

Testing protocol

“If you can’t sample all your calves at once, put labeled ear notches in the freezer as you collect them. Each notch should be submitted in a separate container such as a Ziploc bag. You can send them as a group later for testing,” says Hanzlicek.

If you suspect BVD in a cow-calf herd, test the youngest animals first.

“Make sure you are testing calves before bull turnout or AI,” Hanzlicek says. “If there’s a PI calf in the herd during breeding season, it will be shedding virus, potentially transmitting it to bred cows in early gestation; you could end up with more PI calves born the next year. To find PI calves or screen for BVD, take an ear notch from every calf at birth or shortly afterward.”

If you find a PI calf, test the dam to make sure she is not PI, even though 97% of PI calves are born from TI dams infected during the first four months of gestation.

“These dams were temporarily infected at the wrong time of pregnancy,” Hanzlicek explains. “People often think PI calves are coming from PI dams, but that’s generally not the case.”

Finally, Hanzlicek says folks bringing calves to feedlots or stocker facilities should make sure none are PI.

“It’s best to test before they go on the truck, but that’s usually not practical, especially if calves are coming from sale barns,” Hanzlicek says. “They should be tested upon arrival, especially calves coming from areas where previous PI animals were diagnosed. With many of the tests, especially the PCR, results can be obtained within less than 24 hours. You can know the BVD status of those calves before exposing other calves.”

Hereford.org August 2023 | 47

MISSOURI BREEDERS

Success Breeds Success

BLUE RIBBON FARMS

Jeff and Stephanie Rawie Aaron and Kylie Noble 11768 W. Farm Rd. 34 Walnut Grove, MO 65770 417-209-5538

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REYNOLDS HEREFORDS

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Huntsville, MO 65259

Cell 660-676-3788

Home 660-277-3679

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Annual Sale

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Polled Herefords and Red Angus Breeding Stock Available

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Hereford.org August 2023 | 49

Handle on HEALTH

Leverage Your Inputs

Internal parasites compromise growth, immune function and more.

Cattle producers put a lot of effort and resources into vaccinating their cattle and offering high-quality feed and mineral. These efforts and resources are not fully utilized and can be wasted if cattle have parasites.

Most cattle producers associate internal parasites with a reduction in feed intake. Specifically, decreased appetite is the primary effect of internal parasites, which means there are fewer nutrients for an animal to absorb. Internal parasites also have a direct effect on nutrition absorption because they cause inflammation in the gut.

Reduced nutrient intake and absorption is detrimental to all cattle but especially to highly stressed animals. Typically, these animals already have lower feed intake without the added stress of an internal parasite challenge.

Internal parasites affect the nutritional status of the animal in three ways: they decrease feed intake, they

decrease nutrient absorption and they increase nutrient requirements. These effects on the animal’s nutritional status are important because they impact and compromise every aspect of biology including growth, milk production, immune function and reproduction.

counts) have been shown to have depressions in feed intake of up to 7.8%.1, 2

Impact on the immune system

Internal parasitic worms burrow into the animal’s gastric glands and damage the gut lining. This causes the immune system to react and put its effort toward fighting the threat.

or another type of viral outbreak. It predisposes cattle to attacks from viruses, and viruses can open the door to bacterial infections.

Even a low number of internal parasites can affect cattle health and performance. Cattle with relatively low parasite burdens (324 total slaughter worm counts) have been shown to have depressions in feed intake of up to 3.2%. Cattle with high parasite burdens (11,164 total slaughter worm

Th1 and Th2 – both types of helper cells – play an important role in immunity. The Th1 response is the immune system’s response to a viral or intracellular infection. A Th2 response is not necessarily specific to parasites but is commonly associated with them. A Th2 response can block a Th1 response.

If there is enough of a worm burden that a Th2 immune response occurs, the immune system will focus almost solely on trying to get rid of the parasites and will not be able to handle an intracellular invader like coccidiosis, pinkeye

Younger animals, such as suckling calves, weaned calves, replacement heifers or stocker cattle are much more susceptible to parasites because they don’t have any immunity built up against them. This will develop as an animal gets older, but cattle are never fully immune to parasites.

Deworming prior to vaccination

In much the same way as a virus does, a modified live five-way vaccine is ideally going to trigger a Th1 response. If cattle are parasitized and a Th2 response is triggered, this can impact the animal’s ability to positively respond to the vaccine.

Vaccine labels say, “Effective for the vaccination of healthy cattle.” It is important to deworm cattle ideally one to two weeks prior

Rains, J. P. Hutcheson, and R. A. Smith. 2000. Pasture deworming and (or) subsequent feedlot deworming with fenbendazole. II. Effects on abomasal worm counts and abomasal pathology of yearling steers. Bovine Pract. 34:115-123.

3J. S. Schutz, J. A. Carroll, L. C. Gasbarre, T. A. Shelton, S. T. Nordstrom, J. P. Hutcheson, H. Van Campen, T. E. Engle. Effects of gastrointestinal parasites on parasite burden, rectal temperature, and antibody titer responses to vaccination and infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus challenge. Journal of Animal Science, Volume 90, Issue 6, June 2012, Pages 1948-1954, https://doi.org/10.2527/jas.2011-4059

4Kevin Gould, M. S. U. E. (2022, January 21). Beef cattle deworming strategies. MSU Extension. Retrieved May 18, 2022, from https://www.canr.msu.edu/news/ beef_cattle_deworming_strategies.

5Dobson R, Jackson F, Levecke B, Besier B, et al. Guidelines for fecal egg count reduction tests (FECRT). World Association for the Advancement of Veterinary Parasitology (WAAVP) (2011) Proceedings: 23rd International Conference of the World Association for the Advancement of Veterinary Parasitology.

Even a low number of internal parasites can affect cattle health and performance.
CATTLE HEALTH
— Grant Crawford, Merck Animal Health
1Smith, R. A., Rogers, K. C., Huse, S., Wray, M. I., Brandt, R. T., Hutcheson, J. P., Nichols, W. T., Taylor, R. F., Rains, J. R., McCauley, C. T. Pasture deworming and (or) subsequent feedlot deworming with fenbendazole. I. Effects on grazing performance, feedlot performance and carcass traits of yearling steers. The Bovine Practitioner. 2000. 34(2), 104-114. 2Taylor, R. F., D. H. Bliss, R. T. Brandt, Jr., W. T. Nichols, J. R.
50 | August 2023 Hereford.org

to vaccination and give them time for their immune system to respond.

Several studies have demonstrated the benefits of proper deworming on the health status of an animal. Research shows that calves dewormed two weeks pre-vaccination maintained lower rectal temperatures following an infectious bovine rhinotracheitis (IBR) challenge than those dewormed at vaccination or not dewormed at all.3 This means they were better able to withstand the disease challenge than those that had not been dewormed.

An Oklahoma trial compared the effects of deworming calves on pasture during the suckling phase and after weaning in the stocker phase.1 Morbidity was highest in cattle that were never dewormed and lowest in cattle that were dewormed in both phases. Additionally, cattle that were never dewormed were treated more times for respiratory disease than those that were dewormed in either or both phases.

Summer deworming can be easy

Deworming cattle ahead of vaccination doesn’t have to mean a trip through the chute or intensive labor. Using feed and mineral forms of dewormers — such as range cubes, dewormer blocks or mineral — require relatively little time and labor and are highly effective.

This is important to consider, especially midsummer. If dewormed at turnout, cattle will start picking up parasites almost immediately once they are on green grass, and those parasites can start doing damage almost immediately. If cattle are not dewormed until

they come off the pasture in the fall, they have several months of picking up worms and damaging their gut.

It also is important to deworm calves at the cows’ sides. At about 6 to 8 weeks of age, calves start ruminating and are at high risk of internal worms. Deworming at earlier stages of infection can result in improved weaning weights. For spring-calving herds, typically, it is good to deworm calves six to eight weeks after turnout onto pasture.4

Parasite control best practices

There is not always a visual sign of parasitism. After deworming, we often don’t know how effective the deworming was and the amount of time before reinfestation occurs.

A fecal egg count reduction test (FECRT) is the standardized diagnostic tool to test manure for the presence of internal parasites’ eggs. It is important that 20 samples are taken both at treatment and 14 days post-treatment. A successful deworming should result in a 90% or greater reduction in parasite eggs in feces.5

You can request a free FECRT kit from Merck Animal Health. Work with your veterinarian and animal health representative to assess your deworming program and find the timing and formulations that work best for your operation.

Editor’s note: Grant Crawford, Ph.D., is a Merck Animal Health associate director of technical services. Copyright 2022 Merck & Co. Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA, and its affiliates. All rights reserved.

Hereford.org August 2023 | 51

When it comes to ranch record keeping, more Hereford breeders use CattleMax than any other software program. That’s because, not only does CattleMax let you organize every bit of data you need, it lets you do so easily , whether you’re at home or in the field.

cattlemax.com/hereford
Works seamlessly with the American Hereford Association - Import Herd Inventory - Manage TPR - Register Cattle - Update EPDs Hereford.org August 2023 | 53
• 1-800-641-2343

What’s New?

Association News and Events

“What’s New?” is a column designed to keep you in the know about Hereford happenings. You can sign up for Hereford Headlines, an electronic newsletter distributed the first Friday of each month by the American Hereford Association (AHA) highlighting Hereford news and events. You can also receive the Bald Faced Bottom Line, a commercially-focused electronic newsletter sent the third Friday of each month. To subscribe to these free newsletters, send an email to outreach@hereford.org. Archived issues are posted at Hereford.org.

Annual Meeting

Plan to be in Kansas City

Join us Oct. 20-22 in Kansas City, Mo., for the 2023 American Hereford Association (AHA) Annual Meeting and Educational Forum. This year’s event is a can’t-miss opportunity for progressive cattlemen and women focused on numbers that matter.

The schedule includes an educational forum and trade show on Friday, Oct. 20. The Hereford Youth Foundation of America (HYFA) Scholarship winners and the National Junior Hereford Association (NJHA) Fed Steer Shootout winners will be recognized at a special awards luncheon on Friday, Oct. 20, in conjunction with the educational forums. The Annual Meeting and Hereford Honorees breakfast will take place Saturday morning, Oct. 21, and will honor the 2023 Hereford Heritage Hall of Fame and Hereford Hall of Merit inductees. The national show award winners will be recognized before the Ladies of the Royal sale on Saturday, Oct. 21. The National Hereford Queen will be crowned on Sunday, Oct. 22.

2023 AHA Board of Directors candidate slate

The AHA nominating committee is pleased to announce the six candidates nominated for election to the AHA Board of Directors. The candidates are:

Tom Boatman, Rockford, Ill. 404-372-6754

tomtammy@perksranch.com

David Burns, Pikeville, Tenn. 615-477-5668 burnsda2@gmail.com

Jerry Delaney, Lake Benton, Minn. 507-820-0661 jdh@delaneyherefords.com

Cindy Pribil, Hennessey, Okla. 405-853-5232 rpribil65@pldi.net

Linda Sidwell, Carr, Colo. 970-381-6811 office@sidwellherefords.com

Scott Sullivan, Grannis, Ark. 870-584-8990 sullivanscottn@yahoo.com

Commercial Programs

Beef Empire Days success

Congratulations to Darrin Reed, Reed Polled Herefords, Clifton, Kan., for his success at the 2023 Beef Empire Days. Reed is a fouryear participant in the Hereford Feedout Program (HFP). His steer placed fourth in the carcass contest — a USDA Prime, yield grade 2.66 carcass. The steer was fed by HRC Feed Yards in Scott City, Kan., as part of the HFP.

Summer video markets

Hereford breeders are encouraged to attend and network with commercial producers, buyers and market representatives at summer video auction sales.

July 31-Aug. 4 — Superior

Livestock Auction – Video Royale, Winnemucca, Nev.

Aug. 8-9 — Cattle Country Video – Oregon Trail Classic, Gering, Neb.

Aug. 14-15 — Western Video Market, Cheyenne, Wyo.

Aug. 21-25 — Superior

Livestock Auction – Big Horn Classic, Sheridan, Wyo.

Aug. 21-22 — Northern Livestock Video Auction – Early Fall Preview, Billings, Mont.

Sept. 6-7 — Superior Livestock Auction – Labor Day, Hudson Oaks, Texas

Sept. 12 — Western Video Market, Ogallala, Neb.

Sept. 14 — Cattle Country Video – Sandhills Roundup, Cheyenne, Wyo.

Sept. 18 — Northern Livestock Video Auction – Fall Premier, Billings, Mont.

For more information about AHA commercial programs, such as the Hereford Advantage or Premium Red Baldy Programs, contact Trey Befort at tbefort@herefordbeef.org.

Youth Scholarship deadline approaching

The HYFA fall scholarship deadline is Sept. 1. HYFA will award more than $200,000 in scholarship money throughout the year, including $165,000 in scholarships during the AHA Annual Meeting and Conference in Kansas City, Mo. Scholarships must be submitted online through Submittable. To learn more, visit HerefordYouthFoundation.org/ scholarships.

Deadline for queen applications

National Hereford Queen applications are due Sept. 1. For more information, email nationalherefordwomen@gmail.com.

Enter the Fed Steer Shootout

Learn more about the cattle feeding sector and how your genetics perform in the feedlot by participating in the 2024 NJHA Fed Steer Shootout. The contest entry deadline is Nov. 1, 2023, and delivery for cattle to HRC Feed

Yards in Scott City, Kan., is Dec. 9-13, 2023. For more information and planning your delivery of cattle, contact Trey Befort at tbefort@herefordbeef.org. Cattle can be entered individually or in pens of three and must meet the following qualifications:

• 2023-born steers

• Purebred Hereford and commercial Herefordinfluenced steer categories

• 600-pound weight minimum

• Be weaned at least 45 days prior to delivery

• Received two rounds of vaccinations

Visit Hereford.org/Youth/ NJHA-Fed-Steer-Shootout to enter and learn more.

Hereford World

Glossy advertising rate change

Hereford World glossy issues and the Baldy Advantage commercial issues (previously the Hereford World tabloids) advertising rates now follow the same pricing. The new glossy pricing structure is effective with the September 2023 Hereford World. The pricing is as follows:

• Full-page, four-color: $1,320

• Half-page, four-color: $990

• Quarter-page, four-color: $770

• Full-page, black-and-white: $880

• Half-page, black-and-white: $550

• Quarter-page, black-and-white: $330

• Seedstock directory (per inch, per year): $385

AHA CORNER 54 | August 2023 Hereford.org

FALL BULL SALE

Entry deadline: Aug. 31st

Hereford and Brahman

Already consigned: Smith Hereford, Schmidt Hereford, Bill Breeding, Rafter J, Case Hereford, OH Triangle, Moscatelli

PRIDE of TEXAS

FEMALE SALE

Entry deadline: Sept. 30th

Registered and commercial Hereford

Registered and commercial Brahman

Certified Brafords

True F1 (1 parent Hereford) Black or Red Baldy (1 parent Hereford) Watch

Now accepting entries for our FALL BULL SALE & PRIDE of TEXAS FEMALE SALE
Beeville Livestock
October 28, 2023 • Noon At
Commission
our website and Facebook page for updates on the sale. Sara Lanham, Sale Manager 210-844-4806 southtexashereford@gmail.com www.southtexashereford.org
For more information contact:
Hereford.org August 2023 | 55

Consigned to Hereford Night in OKC

Jan. 5, 2024

BB CALLIE 13K {DLP,HYP}

P44351284 • Calved: 3/3/2023

Sire: BOYD 31Z BLUEPRINT 6153

Dam: BB CHARLIE 13G

Confirmed bred to KCF Bennett Resolve, due to calve March 2024.

Rd. • Platteville, WI 53818

Find us on facebook @ bevanfamilybeef

WISCONSIN HEREFORD BREEDERS

StarckCentury Farm

—Cadott,WI— Cell:715.313.3234

E-mail:starckfarm@gmail.com

100%AIsiredherdand wholeherdDNAtested!

HUTH Polled Herefords

Jerry, Maryann, Michael and Karl Huth

W9096 County Trunk AS Oakfield, WI 53065 920-251-0281

jerry@huthcattle.com

www.huthcattle.com

LARSON HEREFORD FARMS

N8494 110th St. Spring Valley, WI 54767

Fred, home 715-772-4680

Fred, cell 715-495-0837

Easten, cell 715-495-6233

Jerry, home 715-772-4566

www.larsonherefordfarms.com

AD

Contact NOAH BENEDICT 217-372-8009 or noahb@hereford.org

OTTER CREEK

Tod, Sondra, Blake and Bryce Brancel W7874 Hwy. 23 Endeavor, WI 53950

608-617-6949 cell

608-697-9026

Ben and Gail Brancel 608-981-2003 brancel@nextgenerationgenetics.com

Mark Friedrich and Family 1454 70th Ave. Roberts, WI 54028 715-760-2350

markfriedrich@yahoo.com

W13707 Hwy. 44 Brandon, WI 53919

Brent Hopp

920-266-6936 and

Emma Hermsdorf 608-628-2330

hoppbre@gmail.com

Facebook @ H&H Cattle Farm

Polled Herefords

Chuck and Tracy Badertscher

4313 Cannonball Tr. Dodgeville, WI 53533 608-574-2002 Chuck 608-574-3858 Tracy ctbad2@hotmail.com

Eric, Rosie, Briana, Rhett and Madison Katzenberger Monroe, WI 608-214-1154

Nick and Lenore Katzenberger Pearl City, IL

JOSH and AMY SPAETH 2515 250th St. Cadott, WI 54727 715-289-4098 spaethherefords@gmail.com www.spaethfarms.com

Rick,Jenny,Ryder andRickiStarck
www.plumriverranch.com SPACE AVAILABLE
BB Charlie 13G Dam of Callie.
Jason, Jaclyn, Mya and Bianca Bevan Joyce Bevan 1681 Austin
56 | August 2023 Hereford.org
•••• Jackie 608-732-4251 •••• bvbbeef@outlook.com Jaclyn@Jaclynbevan.com

Butch and Maryellen • 715-597-2036 • Cell 715-828-7271

Brandon: 715-533-2470 • Garritt: 715-586-0033

Michael 715-533-3370 • Tiffany: 507-582-1175

HEREFORDS

our only business

Ken and Sandy 608-434-0578

Travis and Megan 608-434-2843

Jim and Veronica

E10645 Hatchery Rd. Baraboo, WI 53913 ken254@centurytel.net

Pierce’s Hereford Haven

Issac and Stephanie Knuth

E4924 Narrows Creek Farm

Loganville, WI 53943

608-415-7511

iknuth@knuthconcreteandconstruction.com

AD SPACE AVAILABLE

Contact NOAH BENEDICT 217-372-8009 or noahb@hereford.org

WhiskeyFarmsRun

hjh@whiskeyrunfarms.com www.whiskeyrunfarms.com

Hank and Charlotte Handzel and Family 2791 Sime Rd.

Cottage Grove, WI 53527 608-839-5207 Main 608-235-9417 Cell

N. Water

Manawa, WI 54949 920-596-2580 Fax 920-596-2380 starr@wolfnet.net

Steven, Jill, Nicole, Curtis, Alison and Austin Folkman N250 Highview Rd. Ixonia, WI 53036 920-474-7403 262-617-6346 cell cnlfarm@hughes.net www.cnlfarm.com

Investing, Breeding and Exhibiting Elite Hereford Cattle

Eric 262-719-6902  Allison 262-751-6406

Tessa, Makenna, Austin & Killian

www.FourLeafCattle.com

Harold and Connie Lietzau 7477 Iband Ave. Sparta, WI 54656 608-633-2875

Troy and Michelle Jaydon, Devon and Jocelyn Taylor and Ty Taylor cell 608-487-0015

Steve Merry 1840 Co. Rd. CC Hartford, WI 53027 Steven.Merry@aurora.org 414-881-5274
Six Generations of MERRY Polled Hereford Breeders –Spanning 117 Years
Kelly, Hannah and Ryan Oleson 1169 18th Dr. Arkdale, WI 54613 608-547-0430 20oleson@gmail.com Facebook: Oleson Family Farm
mgmpolledherefords.com
Josh,
Hwy. 10
Fairchild,
W16163 U.S.
WI 54741
us out on Facebook PROUD CONSIGNOR TO SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2023 AT BLACK RIVER FALLS, WI Cattlemen's Delight Looking for you at Cattlemen’s Delight! FIND CALVES LIKE THESE AT CATTLEMEN’S DELIGHT. Offering high quality young cows, heifer calves and show prospects from 55 years of breeding Polled Herefords. WISCONSIN HEREFORD BREEDERS
E5198
cmboettcher@centurytel.net Visit our website: www.brookviewacres.com Check
Joe and Amy Starr and Family
Dr.
Hereford.org August 2023 | 57
Larry Moffett 4075 Mt. Auburn Rd. Decatur, IL 62521 217-428-6496 Cell 217-972-2367 larrymoff@comcast.net FARMS Ray Vandeveer 6261 Brubaker Rd. Salem, IL 62881 618-780-5153 or 618-547-3164 ravan52@hotmail.com PAQUETTE HEREFORD FARM Andrew Paquette 1725 East 3400 North Rd. St. Anne, IL 60964 815-671-0589 apaquette15@gmail.com Fred and Elaine Nessler 217-741-5500 fwn@theprairiecross.com ejn@theprairiecross.com Elizabeth Nessler 217-496-2442 ehn@theprairiecross.com Rick Garnhart Family 6372 E. Edwardsville Rd. German Valley, IL 61039 815-238-2381 garnhart@gmail.com www.mudcreekfarms.com Entwistle Herefords Jerry Entwistle and Family 326 St. Rt. 10 New Holland, IL 62671 217-737-7581 Jerry cell 10124 Michael Rd. Coulterville, IL 62237 Sherwood Burns 618-443-2007 618-521-3678 Kent Burns 618-443-6279 618-521-3199 Cattle for sale at all times Burns Polled H ereford farm Ronnie 217-430-8705 Randy 217-242-1262 Matt 217-779-0775 Derke 217-617-8443 Tait 217-430-5949 Andy, Linley, Bryar and Emersyn Fleisher Knoxville, IL 309-582-4633 andy.fleisher@diamondag.com FFleisher arms THIS SPACE IS AVAILABLE ! CONTACT NOAH BENEDICT 217-372-8009 noahb@hereford.org Yale and Abby Young 27297 E. 2250 N. Rd. • Lexington, IL 61753 815-867-7333 •yaleyoung2008@gmail.com www.youngcattlecompany.com WE HAVE BULLS! This year we were blessed with a heavy bull calf crop. All are full- or half-siblings to these with photos. Stop by to see them yourself or call to talk about how our bulls can work in your program! 58 | August 2023 Hereford.org

Tuscola, IL 61953

Dave, Marcia & Elise Hackett

Dave: 217-621-1761

Elise: 217-621-6864

davehackett91@yahoo.com

35073 E. C.R. 1550 N. Mason City, IL 62664

bhrnds@speednet.com

Brent, cell 217-971-5897

Samantha, Todd, Rachel and Zach Parish 618-926-7388

www.parishfarms.com

136 Penfield, IL 61862 Buddy 217-649-0108 Bailey 217-714-4955 Cody 217-871-9708 edenburnfamilyfarm@gmail.com

1764 U.S.

LORENZEN FARMS

Steve Lorenzen 17696 E. 1825th Rd. Chrisman, IL 61924 217-269-2803

www.lorenzenfarms.com

Floyd, Annette and Brittany 815-223-4484

John Fauth 700 Baldwin Rd. New Athens, IL 62264 618-920-3716

fulabul2@hotmail.com

Chad, Erin and J.W. 815-712-5739

LaSalle, IL 61301

c_herfs1@yahoo.com

Lonny, Kim (Carney) and Riley Rhodes 18736 Cross Creek Rd. Carlinville, Il 62626 217-899-4104 Cell rhodesfarminc.kim@gmail.com

Cattle and Embryos for sale at all times

Benedict Herefords Larry and Julie benherf@yahoo.com 217-737-5686 Chad, Becky, Noah, Caleb and Faith 605 CR 2300 N Dewey, IL 61840 chad@benedictherefords.com Chad - 217-246-5099 www.benedictherefords.com Jack and Sherry Lowderman Monte, Carrie and Rhett Brent, Kris, Blake, and Morgan Cody and Abby P.O. Box 488 Macomb, IL 61455 Office 309-833-5543 www.lowderman. com EASY MONEY PERKS RF 4Z EASY MONEY 2003 ET {DLF,HYF,IEF,MSUDF} P44379889 - Calved: Jan. 06, 2022 - Tattoo: BE 2003 BAFFORD FARMS Look for our consignments to the Heart of America Fall and Spring Sale. New Herd Sire B R CURRENCY 8144 ET {CHB} {DLF,HYF,IEF} DM BR SOONER {CHB} {DLF,HYF,IEF} PERKS 0003 EASY MONEY 4003 {CHB} {DLF,HYF,IEF,MSUDF,MDF} B R GABRIELLE 5082 {DLF,HYF,IEF} 4 3501766 P R 144U RAMONA 0003 ET {DLF,HYF,IEF} T H 75J 243R BAILOUT 144U ET {SOD} {DLF,HYF,IEF} P R 279R RAMONA 7024 ET {DLF,HYF,IEF} T H 122 71I VICTOR 719T {SOD} {DLF,HYF,IEF,MSUDF,MDF} DRF JWR PRINCE VICTOR 71I {SOD} {DLF,HYF,IEF,MSUDF} FDM LADY 23S 4Z {DLF,HYF,IEF} K BCR 19D DOMINETTE 122 {DLF,HYP,IEF} P43267177 F SL LADY P606 23S {DLF,HYF,IEF} P W VICTOR BOOMER P606 {SOD} {DLF,HYF,IEF,MDF} F SL MISS SARAH 65H 5M {HYP} CE BW WW YW DMI SC SCF MM M&G MCE 2.8 2.5 54 91 0.1 1.0 13.2 20 47 5.7 MCW UDDR TEAT CW FAT REA MARB BMI$ BII$ CHB$ 98 1.301.30 88 0.0110.710.08 332397 144 Kevin and Lauren Bafford 10600 Damery Rd. Blue Mound, IL 62513 Kevin 217-454-5126 Lauren 217-521-8224 baffordfarms@gmail.com
FARM
EDENBURN FAMILY
RT.
Hereford.org August 2023 | 59

From the Field

New Arrivals

Cameron and Bailey Curry of Curry Herefords, McAlester, Okla., announce the birth of their daughter, Carsyn Leigh Curry. She was born on June 21. Carsyn weighed 7 lbs. and 1 oz., and she was 20 1/4 inches long. Big sister, Eliza Laine Curry, is happy to welcome Carsyn to the family.

In Passing

Max Clifford

(MC) James, 89, Beaver, Okla., passed June 25.

MC was born Sept. 12, 1933, in Balko, Okla. He was welcomed into the family by parents, Harold and Opal James, and sister, Loretta.

After graduating from Bethany High School in 1951, he attended one year of college at Abilene Christian before returning home to help his father with the farm.

MC was a faithful follower of Christ, teaching Sunday school where he met and fell in love with Bonita Dean. On June 5,

1954, he and Bonita married and established their home near Beaver. Together they worked on the farm. MC held various jobs, working at a local grocery store in Beaver and later in Liberal, Kan., at Beechcraft as he gradually developed his herd of registered polled Hereford cattle. He used selective breeding over 70 years for which he became well known. In 2019 he received the Golden Breeder Award by the American Hereford Association recognizing his efforts.

During that time MC branched out more and started a dairy business, working hard to build a strong foundation for his family. MC and Bonita purchased and operated a dry goods store in Beaver for 17 years and established a seed cleaning business for area farmers.

MC and Bonita worked side by side until Bonita’s death in 2000.

MC continued his life in Beaver County, Oklahoma, and met Becky while attending church. They forged a friendship and later were married March 20, 2002. They continued to raise polled Herefords as well as clean seed wheat for the area farmers with the help of son, Greg, and granddaughter, Kara, for two decades.

MC was preceded in death by parents, Harold and Opal; wife, Bonita; son, Greg; and great grandson, Zaydek.

Survivors include: wife, Becky; sister, Loretta Almand, Ft. Worth, Texas; children, Janice and Tom Statzer, Edmond, Okla., Denise and Larry Bennett, Okarche, Okla., Laura Ryan, Eureka, Calif., and Anna Templin, Tulsa, Okla.; grandchildren, Jamie Farrow, Kristi and Kenny DeFord, Danielle and Chris Rankin, Kara and Carl Roberts, Dustin Bennett, John Ray Eccles III,

Lynleigh Eccles, Mason, Samuel and Paul Templin, and Isaac Zein; great-grandchildren, Ella Farrow, Braylan James and KaeDena Roberts, Kaden DeFord, Bennett and Case Rankin, and John Ray Eccles IV; and many other aunts, uncles and cousins too numerous to name.

Clifford Webster

“Bud” Sloan, 84, Hamilton, Mo., passed June 30.

A legend can only be imitated, never duplicated.

Clifford “Bud” Sloan embodies this sentiment. When Bud spoke, everyone listened. He commanded attention without demanding it. His unmatched reputation was grounded in humility. With a work ethic second to none, his impact on youth is immeasurable. After a lifetime of helping others in the livestock business, Bud’s life will be remembered as one of the most extensive and respectable careers in the livestock industry.

Bud established his reputation in the livestock industry at a relatively young age, gaining the respect of cattlemen. His appointment as beef cattle superintendent of the American Royal in the early 1970s showcased his expertise as a herdsman, consultant and superior cattle marketer. His dedication, extensive experience and management techniques earned him a promotion to livestock superintendent in 1991.

Neil Orth, former executive vice president of the American International Charolais Association, emphasizes Bud’s long and successful career in the merchandising of purebred livestock. Being in business since 1971 speaks volumes about Bud’s trustworthiness, honesty and respectability.

However, Bud’s success did not come overnight. He paid his dues and worked relentlessly to achieve his goals. Born in Kingston, Mo., in 1939, Bud grew up on a livestock and grain farm in Hamilton. At the tender age of 11, Bud’s father passed away, leaving him and his older brother responsible for the farm and teaching their mother how to drive. Bud developed a strong work ethic from an early age, taking on various jobs such as clipping sheep, milking cows and working in a clothing store.

Actively involved in 4-H and FFA, Bud’s FFA chapter consistently ranked among the top two or three in the state. His successful show career exhibiting pigs and cattle laid the foundation for his expertise in cattle evaluation and handling. In 1957, Bud married his childhood sweetheart, Doris Blackburn Sloan. Their shared adventures included raising four daughters, two grandchildren, one greatgrandson and countless head of livestock.

Bud’s livestock career began after high school when he joined Ruben Edwards as a herdsman in Middletown, Mo. At HampAn Farms, Bud diligently worked with Hampshire hogs and Angus cattle, gaining valuable experience in marketing and sale management. He then spent 10 years at Dor Mac Angus Farms in Lyma, Ill., working for J.C. McLean, an inductee of the Angus Heritage Foundation.

McLean played a pivotal role in Bud’s knowledge and experience, as they raised four consecutive international bull champions and achieved numerous other accomplishments. Bud started his show circuit in July with county fairs, traveling across the country fitting and showing

Bud Sloan AHA CORNER MC James
60 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Carsyn Curry

cattle. One of Bud’s notable moments was witnessing the entry of the Dor Macs Bardoliermere 150th Angus show bull, representing one of the last Dor Mac bull champions in 1959.

In the late ’60s, Bud transitioned from herdsman to livestock merchandiser. He joined the Drover’s Journal in 1968, where he worked alongside colleagues Neil Orth and Stanley Stout. Bud’s salesmanship skills developed rapidly as he traveled across the Midwest, selling advertising and marketing livestock. The Drover’s Journal, a weekly livestock publication, provided a fertile training ground for Bud, exposing him to various auctioneers and fieldmen.

In 1971, Stout informed Bud about a new business venture, leading to the establishment

Hereford Happenings

of North American Auction Company with Curt Rodgers. As one of the first businesses in the purebred cattle industry to offer full-service marketing, North American pioneered new and innovative techniques. Their early success included selling more than $12 million in Charolais cattle sales in the first year.

Bud’s involvement in the American Royal spanned over 44 years. Serving as either beef cattle superintendent or livestock superintendent, Bud played a vital role in reorganizing the structure of the American Royal, transforming it into the premier show it is today. His dedication to the industry led to the establishment of scholarships and financial assistance programs for youth involved in agriculture.

Bud’s impact extended beyond his professional achievements.

He served as a mentor and advisor to countless individuals seeking his guidance. His colleagues and peers recognized his talent and named him the Livestock Marketeer of the Year in 2008, further validating his contributions to the industry.

When asked about his success, Bud attributed it to hard work and the people around him. He believed in building relationships and fostering trust, which has been the cornerstone of his remarkable career.

Bud’s legacy in the livestock industry remains etched in the hearts and minds of those who have had the privilege to know him. He is a true legend, leaving a lasting impact on the industry and a generation of future agriculturists who have been inspired by his dedication, expertise and unwavering integrity.

Steve Sellers served as the director of communications for the Georgia Cattlemen’s Association until his death in 2022. Previously Steve held positions with EDJE Technologies, Auction.com and other firms. Steve and his wife, CeCe, called Lake Park, Ga., home.

Mike Sorensen is the longtime owner and publisher of Livestock Plus (LPI) magazine. Based in Iowa, Mike made LPI a household name traveling the country and providing ring service for some of the most progressive purebred breeders. Mike and his wife, Dixie, reside in Greenfield, Iowa.

The Livestock Marketeers held their 58th Annual Hall of Fame Banquet in Kansas City, Mo., on June 13. This year’s host was the American Hereford Association (AHA) and Certified Hereford Beef® The 2023 class of inductees was comprised of Steve Sellers (posthumous), Mike Sorensen and Joe Rickabaugh.

Joe Rickabaugh has served as the AHA central region field representative and director of seedstock marketing since 1999. Before his tenure at AHA, Joe worked for the Kansas Livestock Association. Joe and Tracey Rickabaugh currently live in Topeka, Kan. This year’s event saw the introduction of the Livestock Marketeers Scholarship. This award is aimed at college-age students who are interested in entering the livestock marketing industry.

The 2023 Livestock Marketeers inductees (l to r) Joe Rickabaugh, Mike Sorensen and Bruce Miller, representing Steve Sellers.
Bid in Person or Online NEXTGENERATIONSGENETICS.COM STEVE JANN & MATT MERRY 414-881-5274 STEVEN.MERRY@AURORA.ORG MGMPOLLEDHEREFORDS.COM OCT. 15, 2023 FEATURING THE (ALMOST) MATURE COW HERD DISPERSAL of Next Gen! of Next Gen! Contactusforacatalog! VANGUARD SERVICE AND PROGENY SELL! SELLING BRED FEMALES, COW/CALF PAIRS, SELECT OPEN HEIFERS and Elite Genetic lots! and Elite Genetic lots! TOD, SONDRA, BLAKE & BRYCE BRANCEL 608-697-9026 608-617-6949 BRANCEL@NEXTGENERATIONGENETICS.COM Noon at Next Generation Genetics W7874 State Road 23,Endeavor,WI 53930 Hereford.org August 2023 | 61
Rickabaugh honored by the Livestock Marketeers

Nancy and Tim Keilty 6192 S. French Rd. • Cedar, MI 49621 231-228-6578

www.cottonwoodspringsfarm.com

Ron’s Cell 517-230-7431

Jill’s Cell 517-627-4327 jilllemac@aol.com

Michigan Hereford Association CODY HILEMAN 989-802-2366

hilemanherf@gmail.com

Larry and Margaret Breasbois Heather and Matt 310 E. Freeland Rd. • Merrill, MI 48637 989-835-6748 • mbreasbois1@gmail.com

Paul and Christie Johnston Cole and Andrew 3162 S. Five Mile Rd. • Merrill, MI 48637 989-859-1131

Phil and Chris Rottman

2148 S. Croswell • Fremont, MI 49412 231-924-5776 • pcr@ncats.net

www.pcrherefords.com

Performance Bred Bulls

Pete Bramschreiber 906-863-2052

GMF

• grand meadows farm • Dave, Jill and Kristin Bielema Ben and Lindsay Gandy Reed, Kara and Fox Loney greatlakesherefordbeef@gmail.com grandmeadowsfarm.com 616-292-7474

beefssr@gmail.com

David, Bonnie and Logan Forgette 737 U.S. Hwy 41 • Carney, MI 49812 David 906-458-3233 Logan 906-295-1652

davidforgette63b@gmail.com

Making Show Cattle that Make Momma Cows!

Hereford.org | 816-842-3757 MORE POUNDS. MORE CALVES. MORE PROFIT. WHOA. Come home to Hereford. Herefords are known as the efficiency experts for a reason. Herefords boost pregnancy rates by 7% and add $30 per head in feedyard profitability in a crossbreeding system. And Hereford genetics bring unrivaled hybrid vigor, longevity and disposition. Scott McDonald 7791 Eastern Ave. S.E. Grand Rapids, MI 49508 Scott 616-446-2146 Drew 616-368-0818
12967 N. Cochran Rd. Grand Ledge, MI 48837
N1035 Co.
Rd. 577 Menominee, MI 49858 ••••• Paul Bramschreiber 906-290-1365
Creek
Cedar
Herefords
62 | August 2023 Hereford.org

Gary and Karen Simpson

Waveland, IN 765-918-1499

Rodney, Jackie and Jayden Simpson

Roachdale, IN 765-376-2155

rj_simpson@tds.net

HayhurstFarms@aol.com

Clinkenbeard Farms Watch for our consignments at Indiana Hereford Assn. Fall Extravaganza Sale CALVES OUT OF: Reload, Wideload, Long Drive, Rushmore, Catapult 320, Time Traveler, Times A Wastin and 33Z Cattle for Sale Privately! Offering Heifers & Show Steers 14099 E. County Line Rd., Edwardsport, IN 47528 • Cell 812-881-8988 • gjclink@hotmail.com and Sons Bruce, Shoshanna, Blake, Ashley, Jordan and Brian 4072 E. 500 S. Waldron, IN 46182 317-407-3618 cell bruceeverhart56@gmail.com FARMS The Duncan Family 1264 N. Mountain Rd. Wingate, IN 47994 David cell 765-366-0295 davidandjilld@aol.com www.ableacrescattle.com G ary Greenwood dV M 765-585-1105 3013 W. State Rd. 38 West Lebanon, IN 47991 Plymouth, IN Andy Aker 574-780-0342 Jim Haug 574-952-3485 akerjamie@gmail.com Lee, Cindy and Matthew Elzemeyer 2538 State Rd. 122 Richmond, IN 47374 765-969-2243 lee@elzehereford.com EPH Elzemeyer Polled Herefords Terry, Susan, Lillian and Hayley Hayhurst 14477
S. Carlisle St. Terre Haute, IN 47802 812-696-2468
812-236-0804 cell
our website! www.deatsman.com 90-Day Bred Recips Registered Hereford Cattle Herd West Terre Haute, IN Matt – 812 870- 6968
– 812-870-3620
– 812-230-6689
– 254-485-5080
Family Herefords
Brian, Janelle, Collin and Landon Deatsman 5708 North 200 East Leesburg, Indiana 46538 Brian Cell: (574) 527-6679 Visit
Megan
Rachel
Tanner
SIMPSON
Hereford.org August 2023 | 63

478-625-7664

3600 Ludlow Rd. Good Hope Community Lena, MS 39094 601-654-3584

omaraj@phelps.com

jason@jasondayconstruction.com

www.DayRidgeFarm.com

Herdsman

P.O. Box 215 Cross Plains, TN 37049 615-478-4483

billymjackson@aol.com

jacksonfarmsherefords.com

SHHH. THERE’S A LOT OF VALUE IN A QUIET, GOOD-DISPOSITIONED COW. No broken fences. No busted gates. No injured people. Herefords lead the way when it comes to the silent traits — and increase profitability by more than $51 per cow per year at the same time. COME HOME TO HEREFORD. hereford.org | 816-842-3757 ANDY SMITH (704)-400-3436 pandjfarmsherefords@gmail.com 7007 Sugar and Wine Road Monroe, NC 28110 4134 County Hwy. 30 Horton, AL 35980 Glynn Debter 205-429-2040 Perry Debter 205-429-4415 Fax 205-429-3553 Joel and Amanda Blevins 324 Austin Ln. Wytheville, VA 24382 276-759-1675 herefordhollow@gmail.com 409 Johnsfield Rd. Shelby, NC 28150 Bryson Westbrook 980-230-4868 brysonw@thewestbrookco.com MATHENY HEREFORDS Andrew, Suzanne, Austin and Taylor Belle Matheny 6706 U.S. Hwy. 68 Mays Lick, KY 41055 Andrew 606-584-5361 Austin 606-375-2167 amathenyherefords@gmail.com 1095 Charles Smith Rd. • Wadley, GA 30477 Charles E. Smith, Owner 478-252-5622 • Fax 478-252-8754
478-494-7567 cell 2731 River Rd. • Wadley, GA 30477 Kyle and Jennifer Gillooly, Owners Home Kyle: 478-494-9593 • Jenn: 478-494-6693 ces-predestined.com 361 Browning Rd., Telford, TN 37690 Cell 423-791-4458 Jason and Emmy, Chelsea, Baileigh, Madison and Rhett Day jason@dayridgefarm.com - Jordan Daigle 252-520-3419 Jim O’Mara
64 | August 2023 Hereford.org

ALABAMA

Glynn Debter, Perry Debter or John Ross Debter 205-429-4415 or 205-429-2040

4134 County Hwy 30 • Horton, AL 35980 debterfarm@otelco.net

Randy & Kelly Owen

John & Randa Starnes

John: 256-996-5545

Red, White, and Black: Dixieland Delight Angus, Hereford Production Sale 1st Sat. in May

Roland Starnes: 706-601-0800 553 Randy Owen Dr. NE Fort Payne, AL 35967 www.tennesseerivermusic.com cattle@tennesseerivermusic.com

CALIFORNIA

Brandon Theising

High Cotton Bull Sale

Last Monday in October

1975 E. Roosevelt Rd. • El Nido, CA 95317

Gino Pedretti 209-756-1609

Mark St. Pierre 209-233-1406

Gino Pedretti Jr. 209-756-2088

High

The Mickelson Family P.O. Box 2689 Petaluma, CA 94953 707-481-3440 Jim 707-396-7364 Bobby JMMick@sonic.net sonomamountainherefords.com

Practical

8 05-526-2195

8 05-358-2115 cell Simi Valley, CA 93062-1019 b randon@pwgcoinc.com www.pwgcattle.com

P.O. Box 1019

Steve Lambert Family 2938 Nelson Ave. Oroville, CA 95965 Cell 530-624-5256

lambertranchherefords.com

Jim McDougald Manager 559-822-2178

McDougald Family 559-822-2289

Registered Herefords 46089 Rd. 208, Friant, CA 93626

Morrell Ranches

Registered Herefords & Angus Barry, Carrie and Bailey Morrell

5640 Co. Rd. 65 Willows, CA 95988

Carrie Cell 530-218-5507

Barry Cell 530-682-5808

morrellranches@yahoo.com

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
THE COLEMAN FAMILY Tim, Kara, Tyler and Kathryn Tim 209-968-7232 • tim@sierraranches.com Kara 209-613-6062 • kara@sierraranches.com P.O. Box 577980, Modesto, CA 95357 WEIMER CATTLE COMPANY Tom and Cindy Weimer P.O. Box 1197 • Susanville, CA 96130 530-254-6802 • 530-260-0416 mobile weimercattleco@citlink.net www.weimercattleco.com COLORADO James T. Campbell High Altitude Registered Horned Herefords Our G Oal is Quality — NOt Qua N tity 850 Meadow Ln. • Guffey, CO 80820 719-689-2047 or Cell 719-650-4929 Clinton Clark 32190 Co. Rd. S • Karval, CO 80823 719-446-5223 • 719-892-0160 Cell cathikclark@gmail.com www.clarkanvilranch.com Registered Herefords and Salers Annual Sale • Second Wednesday in April Cline Registered Herefords 33111 CO – 196 | McClave, CO 81057 719-829-4425 | 719-688 -5410 Stan clineherefordfarms@gmail.com Ken and Suzanne Coleman 1271 C.R. 115 Westcliffe, CO 81252-9611 www.colemanherefords.com 719-783-9324 Fax 719-783-2211 Total Performance Based on a Strong Foundation of Working Mothers Jane Evans Cornelius 970-371-0500 Coyote Ridge Ranch 18300 C.R. 43, LaSalle, CO 80645 Hampton and Kay Cornelius 970-396-2935 www.coyoteridgeherefords.com
Ernst Family Windsor, CO 80550 970-381-6316 www.ernstherefords.com
DISPERSAL SALE Sept. 27th at the farm near Greeley, CO 3673 Co. Rd. 14, Del Norte, CO 81132 Mike 719-657-2519 mikefuchsherefords@gmail.com www.mikefuchsherefords.com
Marshall
COMPLETE
Proven Real World Cattle
Altitude
Tested
1980 at 8,000 ft. MIKE FUCHS HEREFORDS Annual Sale in December Registered Polled, Horned Bulls and Replacement Heifers Robert and Rita Weitzel 16662 Rd. 25 Dolores, CO 81323 970-739-1284 rweitzel@wildblue.net KUBIN HEREFORD RANCH George Kubin • 970-323-6249 4535 Hwy. 348 • Olathe, CO 81425 Line One Breeding Ranching in the Colorado Mountains for Over 100 Years! Registered Hereford and Angus Bulls • Replacement Heifers Mike, Ann, Laura and Daniel Leroux, Owners 239 Cattail Bay • Windsor, CO 80550 Office 970-686-7231 • Ranch 970-653-4219 • Cell 970-222-6005 mike@lerouxlandandcattle.com • www.lerouxlandandcattle.com
Real World Cattle” Tom Robb & Sons POLLED HEREFORDS Registered • Commercial 34125 Rd. 20 N. • McClave, CO 81057-9604 Tom cell 719-688-2334 719-456-1149 • robbherefords@gmail.com Polled Call Matt 970-712-9753 r anchbroker@outlook.com L oma, CO High Altitude Hereford.org August 2023 | 65
PAP
Since
“Profitable

Bryan cell 970-381-0264

Linda cell 970-381-6811

sidwell@ezlink.com

W.C.R. 27 | Carr, CO 80612

JBB/AL HEREFORDS

James and Dawn Anderson / Bev Bryan Bryan and Charly Anderson / 208-280-1505

1973 S. 1500 E., Gooding, ID 83330 jbbalherefords.com

Private treaty bull and heifer sales Herefords Since 1967

Shaw Cattle Co.

S22993 Howe Rd. Caldwell, ID 83607 www.shawcattle.com greg@shawcattle.com

GEORGIA

Polled Herefords • Brafords

Jonny and Toni Harris 334 K-Ville Rd. Screven, Ga 31560 912-586-6585 • Cell 912-294-2470 greenviewfarms@windstream.net www.greenviewfarms.net

Square and Round Bermuda Grass Hay Performance and Quality from Grazing since 1942

IDAHO

THE BULL BUSINESS

Greg: (208) 459-3029 Sam: (208) 880-9044 5540-998 )802( :rekcuT

Ron Shurtz: (208) 431-3311

Neal Ward Family 673 N. 825 W. • Blackfoot, ID 83221 Alicia Billman 208-589-0870 • 208-684-5252 woodenshoefarms@gmail.com

ILLINOIS

Baker Farms

31058 Colyer Rd. Bruneau, ID 83604 www.hereford.com

Guy and Sherry Colyer – 208-845-2313

Guy cell – 208-599-0340

Kyle cell – 208-250-3924

Katie cell – 208-599-2962

HEREFORDS

Debbie McConnell Box 253, Kincaid, IL 62540 217-237-2627

OAK

danielsherefordranch@yahoo.com

Gary’s cell 217-827-2761 Farm is 1.5 miles west of Sharpsburg, Ill.

Bur Ns POlled HerefOrd farm

Sherwood Burns 618-521-3678

Keith Elkington 208-521-1774

Layne 208-681-0765

Eric 208-881-4014

RANGE READY, PERFORMANCE PROVEN Visitors always welcome.

ELKINGTON POLLED HEREFORDS

5080 E. Sunnyside Rd. • Idaho Falls, ID 83406

N. 50th St. Oblong, IL 62449

Darrel and Anna Behrends Jim Behrends & Leonda Markee • Kim & Liz 29014 E. C.R. 1000 N. • Mason City, IL 62664 217-482-5470 dab3741@cassblue.com • www.ohfherefords.com

Andrew Paquette 1725 East 3400 North Rd. St. Anne, IL 60964 815-671-0589 Andrew apaquette15@gmail.com

Hobbs Rd. Rochester, IL 62563 Office 217-529-8878 Greg 217-725-7095

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
54286
HEREFORD RANCH Commitment to Quality since 1915 Bulls for Sale at Private Treaty Excellent Replacement Heifers Follow us on Facebook DanielsHerefordRanch
1350 N. 2100 W. Malad, ID 83252 Dan 208-339-2341 Teresa 208-339-2340 Rex 208-766-2747
Winton and Emily Harris Family
DANIELS
1278
Streator,
Fred Debby Sarah Susan John 815-672-3491 Cell
Fax 815-672-1984 Family Agri-Business Since 1933
E. 20th Rd.
IL 61364
815-257-3491
Dan Bixler 7115
618-544-1842 •
insman542002@yahoo.com
E. 1000th Ave., Newton, IL 62448
618-562-3888 cell
Gary and
Kent & Barb Burns 618-521-3199 Cattle for sale at all times 11770 Wilson Rd., Coulterville, IL 62237 26455 N. 2300th St. • Chrisman, IL 61924 www.efbeef.com • efbeef1@aol.com Joe and Lauri Ellis 765-366-5390 Matt and Lisa Ellis 217-712-0635 Phil and Joyce Ellis 765-665-3207 Eubank Eric, Kenin and Kelby Eubank P.O. Box 11 • Oblong, IL 62449 618-562-4211 Cell eeubank@monteaglemills.com FARMS
arms Rich & Michelle Fleisher Knoxville, IL 309-208-8826 Andy, Bryar & Emersyn Fleisher Knoxville, IL 309-582-4633 HAPP HEREFORDS Chris and Janell Happ 23817 Meridian Rd. Mendota, IL 61342 Chris’s cell 815-823-6652 happ84@yahoo.com www.happherefords.com Cattle for sale anytime at the farm, private treaty. Call or stop by to check them out. Enough cattle to have breeding stock for sale at all times! 9235 E. Eagle Pass Rd. • Ellisville, IL 61431 Ruth Knott 309-293-2313 Robert Knott 309-778-2628 Home 309-224-2628 Mobile Kings, IL 61068 Robert 815-562-6391 James
Malcolm
Since 1919
FARMS INC.
Mark Newbold
FFleisher
815-562-4946
815-562-5879
NEWBOLD
11109
618-592-4590 • 618-562-3401 Cell
HILL FARM
PERFORMANCE
Welcome
HEREFORD RANCH
HEREFORDS • Visitors Always
PAQUETTE
Herefords
66 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Prairie Meadow
11268

Randy and Jamie Mullinix 997 Twp. Rd. 150E Toulon, IL 61483

309-995-3013

Randy 309-853-6565 • Jamie 309-853-7674 purplereign76@gmail.com • www.purplereigncattle.com

Cows for sale at all times

Curtis, Tobie, Erica and Ethan Kesling 1918 W. Delaware Rd. Logansport, IN 46947 574-753-3193

LAUDEMAN FAMILY FARM

Nate and Courtney Wirtjes 9272 Freeport Rd. • Durand, IL 61024 815-629-2441 • Cell 815-871-9118 • wirtjes2@msn.com

Visitors always welcome • Member of The Offense

SAYRE HEREFORD FARM

Tim and Tracie Sayre Seely, Kendi and Kira Sayre 13188 Virginia Rd. • Arenzville, IL 62611 217-473-5143 sayreherefords@gmail.com

Eric, Cindie, Cassie and Krista Allscheid 8052 Andy Rd. • Waterloo, IL 62298 Cell 618-593-9642 soph@htc.net www.ShingleOaksPolledHerefords.com

www.douthitherefords.com

Gene, Lori, Lucas, Logan and Cory Stumpf 473 Gilmore Lake Rd. Columbia, IL 62236

GENE 618-407-8374

LORI 618-407-0429

LUCAS 618-830-0971

West Wind Herefords

Jeff and Kelly Yoder 2356 N 1230 E. Rd. Edinburg, IL 62531 jwyoder62@gmail.com

Kyle 217-565-3275 • Brian 217-827-9708 • Adam 217-823-9763

INDIANA

Douglas E. Gerber 5324 State Rd. 227 S. • Richmond, IN 47374-9425 765-935-5274 Cell • 765-220-1070 douglas@gerbercattle.com • www.gerbercattle.com

Todd’s cell 574-298-4959

cjlaudy@fourway.net www.laudemanfamily.com

Jason’s cell 574-209-6470

3629 5th Rd., Bremen, IN 46506 Connie, Todd and Cassie, Jason and Jeni, and Bryan Rob, Kristie, Kylie and Logan 7477 E. 825 N. • Otterbein, IN 47970 765-491-0258 kristielm2001@yahoo.com

IOWA

STREAM CATTLE CO.

Rod, Sue, Lisa and Sarah Stream 51590 St. Hwy. 14, Chariton,

HERBEL HEREFORDS

“Straight Station Line Ones”

20161 Saline Rd. Lucas, KS 67648

Jon and Robin Herbel 785-324-2430 herbelxp@gmail.com

Since 1944… A respected cow herd and premier Hereford performance bull breeder 2271 C.R. 74 • Quinter, KS 67752

Gordon Jamison 785-299-0441

Daron Jamison 785-650-9639

Devin Sweitzer 785-299-0663 www.jamisonherefords.com

JENSEN BROS.

Kevin and Sheila and Family Kevin — Cell 785-243-6397 Sheila — Cell 785-262-1116 Box 197 • Courtland, KS 66939 jensenks@courtland.net www.jensenbros.net

Mill Creek Ranch

“The Brand That Works”

Alma, KS

Chad, Karsten & Kasen Breiner 7 85-564-2091

David & Diane Breiner 7 85-456-4790

Ryan & Sharon Breiner 7 85-207-3070 millcreekranch.com • millcreekranch@embarqmail.com

Alex & Alison Mih, and Mariam Mih P.O. Box 2, Chanute, KS 66720 620-431-3917 • 620-212-3250 cell amih@mmherefords.com

Breeding cattle for economically relevant traits and performance. mmherefords.com

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
P ete Loehr 704 Virginia Ave. 1 13 Northgate Rd. Taylorville, IL 62568 P eoria, IL 61614 217-825-7913 309-692-6026 Farm is located at: 1777 N. 1000 East Rd., Taylorville, IL 62568 Visit our website for updates throughout the year www.stephensandloehrherefords.com Bar-S Bar-S LHF LHF
Mark Stephens
STEERS
HEIFERS FOR SALE!
SHOW
AND
IA 50049 641-774-8124 • streamcattle@hotmail.com www.streamcattle.com Just north of Chariton on State Hwy. 14 (712) 653-3678 wieseandsons@gmail.com www.wieseandsons.com Bulls • Females • Semen • Embryos 31554 Delta Ave. Manning, IA 51455 P.O. Box 305 Dean and Danny 29111 B Keene Rd. • Maple Hill, KS 66507 785-256-4643 • 785-256-4010 Danny cell 785-383-2493 Located 13 miles west of Topeka on I-70, Keene/Eskridge exit then 3 miles south
Grant and Linda McKay and Family 1226 8th Rd. Marysville, KS 66508 785-619-6086 308-470-1190 cell glmherefords@bluevalley.net www.glmherefords.com Walter, Megan and Chuck Megan 785-332-8575 Chuck 785-332-4034 1805 RS 115 St. Francis, KS 67756 megan@douthitherefords.com
d Out H it d Ow N ey l a N d & C attle ll C
KANSAS
The Chosen Female Sale October 19, 2023 Annual Bull Sale March 7, 2024
Hereford.org August 2023 | 67

10272 S. Forsse Rd. • Falun, KS 67442 www.oleencattleco.com oleencattle@hometelco.net

Glenn 785-826-0870

Chuck 785-452-2961 Brandon 785-452-8148

Kevin and Vera Schultz Cell 620-546-4570

Tyler and Hannah Schultz 620-546-1574

Annual Production Sale • 4th Saturday in March Stop by for a visit anytime.

Schu-Lar Herefords, LLC

“YOUR BRAND OF HEREFORD” SCHUMANN

367 Hwy. 40, Lecompton, KS 66050 • 785-887-6754 brycegina@sunflower.com

LARSON 508 Rockfence Pl., Lawrence, KS 66049 • 785-843-5986 schular@sunflower.com

David and Delores Stump

Dan and Kim Schmidt 1128 Hwy. 9 Blue Rapids, KS 66411

Dave 785-556-0124

Dan 785-562-6685 info@springhillherefords.com • www.springhillherefords.com

Umberger Polled Herefords

Greg Umberger 3018 U Rd. • Rozel, KS 67574 620-527-4472

Cell: 620-923-5120 gregumberger@yahoo.com www.umbergerpolledherefords.com

MATHENY HEREFORDS

Brad, Carla, Clay, Clint, Caleb and Cooper 1011 Driftwood Lane Elizabethtown, KY 42701 Cell 270-668-7126 Fax 270-735-9922 bchambliss@priorityapproval.com

6706 US Hwy. 68 Mays Lick, KY 41055

Andrew, Suzanne, Austin and Taylor Belle Matheny

Andrew 606-584-5361 Austin 606-375-2167 amathenyherefords@gmail.com

TUCKER STOCK FARMS

Registered Angus and Polled Herefords

S F T

John A. Tucker, II 1790 Hidden Valley Lane Hudson, KY 40145 270-617-0301

BULLS ALWAYS FOR SALE

MARYLAND

EAST SIDE FARM

Registered Polled Herefords

Jay and Shelly Stull 10718-A Liberty Rd. Frederick, MD 21701 301-898-8552 www.eastsidehereford.com eastsidehereford@comcast.net Visitors welcome!

MINNESOTA

David and Lorie Kitchell Family

Matthew & Darci, Dawson and Dutton Kitchell 3471 State Hwy. 200 • Ada, MN 56510-9260 701-799-7690 • www.dakitchfarms.com

KENTUCKY

POLLED HEREFORDS

Robert and Susan Botkin 1999 Walnut Hill Rd. Lexington, KY 40515 859-271-9086

859-533-3790 Cell shane4413@windstream.net

Cattle for Sale at All Times

6077 Helena Rd. • Mays Lick, KY 41055

Charlie 606-584-5194 • Blake 606-375-3718 www.boydbeef.com

Jacob, Michelle and Andrew Wolfrey 3859 Federal Hill Rd. • Jarrettsville, MD 21084 410-692-5029 • GGSC@grimmelfarms.com www.grimmelgirlsshowcattle.com

SCH Polled Herefords

Samuel C. and Linda Hunter • 301-824-4771 13651 Newcomers Rd., Hagerstown, MD 21742

HERD SIRES: KCF Bennett York D377, KCF Bennett D367 G391, KCF Bennett 776 G413 and SCH Sensation D503 G4

MICHIGAN

Jerry and Shelly Delaney & Family 2071 C.R. 101 • Lake Benton, MN 56149 507-368-9284 • 507-820-0661 Jerry cell jdh@delaneyherefords.com • www.delaneyherefords.com

Les Krogstad cell 218-289-5685 3348 430th St, Fertile, MN 56540 218-945-6213 • kph@gvtel.com www.krogstadpolledherefords.com

Darin Krogstad 16765 Welch Shortcut Welch, MN 55089 651-485-0159

2477 N.W. Main St. • Coon Rapids, MN 55448 We welcome your visit!

Doug and JoAnn 763-755-4930

Bryan and Marytina 763-389-0625

Bradley and Brigitte 612-720-1311

W7048 C.R. 356 • Stephenson, MI 49887

Glenn Hanson, Sr 9 06-753-4684

Glenn Hanson, Jr 9 06-630-5169 “Cattle made for the North in the North”

SPRINGWATER POLLED

HEREFORDS

Troy Williamson 110 161st St. Garretson, SD 57030 507-597-6221 605-254-7875 Cell twilliamson@alliancecom.net

Chad Williamson 339 91st St. Pipestone, MN 56164 507-825-5766 507-215-0817 Cell springwater@svtv.com

MISSISSIPPI

Hwy. 28 W. • P.O. Box 753 • Hazlehurst, MS 39083 Dayne Zimmerman 704-906-1571 daynez@mindspring.com www.caldwellherefordranch.com

Herman Nunely and Family 204 Co. Rd. 994 • Iuka, MS 38852 Cell 662-279-5136

Home 662-423-3317 leaningcedarherefords@gmail.com

103 Earl McGuffee Rd. New Hebron, MS 39140 www.mcguffeeherefords.com

Joe McGuffee 601-672-0245

Typeface

Ryan McGuffee 601-668-1000 ryanmcgu@bellsouth.net

68 | August 2023 Hereford.org

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
BOTKIN
Tyler Russell 601-331-0409 — Medici Script Medium
2048 280th Ave., Haviland, KS 67059 www.sandhillfarms.com

Journagan Ranch

AGRICULTURE

Colton

Parker

Sims Ross

Ranch 662-462-5885 Don 662-284-9410 Colton 662-415-5885

122 Co. Rd. 358 Burnsville, MS 38833 donaldksims@hotmail.com

MISSOURI

Marty D. Lueck, Manager Rt. 1, Box 85G • Mountain Grove, MO 65711 417-948-2669 • Cell 417-838-1482

Eric, Jr. 417-860-7151

Eric & Kami 417-737-0055

SPHHerefords@outlook.com

McMURRY CATTLE

2027 Iris Ln. Billings, MT 59102 406-697-4040 406-254-1247

TOM BIGLIENI AND JILL EWING 2109 Des Peres Rd., St. Louis, MO 63131 417-827-8482 • tgbig@sbcglobal.net

FARM ADDRESS: 3345 Lollar Branch Rd., Sullivan, MO 63080

Owner: Al Bonebrake

James Henderson, Herdsman 417-588-4572 • Springfield, MO

MONTANA

2.4 mi. E of 7 Hwy

ROD FINDLEY 32505 E. 179th St. Pleasant Hill, MO 64080 816-540-3711 • 816-365-9959 findleyfarms@gmail.com

Straight Line One Cooper Holden Genetics

BULLS AVAILABLE AT PRIVATE TREATY

Harding Bros. Herefords

MARVIN AND EVERETT HARDING Rt. 2 • Ridgeway, MO 64481 660-872-6870

HIGH PRAIRIE FARM

Gregg and Denver Alsup 18 Alsup Ln. Fair Grove, MO 65648 417-766-6801

gailalsup@gmail.com

Chris and Susan Illg

13299 Bear Ave.

Cainsville, MO 64632

Chris 660-425-2561

illgcattleco@outlook.com

REGISTERED POLLED HEREFORDS

Genetics for Certified Hereford Beef®

Fred, Doreen and Rebecca McMurry

Squaw Creek Ranch 20 miles east of Billings www.mcmurrycattle.com mcmurrycattle@gmail.com

18 N Fork Road Townsend, MT 59644 (406) 422-6464 info@schockherefordranch.com

HERDSMAN: Dallas Casqueira (406) 461-4698

26 Years Line 1 Genetics

CURLEW Cattle Company

BULLS For Sale in the Spring Howard Moss 895 Whitetail Rd., Whitehall, MT 59759 406-287-9947

Mark, Della, Lacey and Jane’a Ehlke P.O. Box 1487 Townsend, MT 59644 406-266-4121

and Tammy 406-544-1536 Kurt and Jessica 406-239-5113 P.O. Box 30055, Gold Creek, MT 59733 bruce@thomasherefords.com www.thomasherefords.com

Wichman Herefords

www.wichmanherefords.com

Registered bulls and females for sale by private treaty. Proven bloodlines, longevity, performance, functional justinwichman22@gmail.com

Justin and Carmen Wichman 1921 Wichman Rd. 4 06-350-3123 cell Moore, MT 59464 4 06-374-6833 home

www.ehlkeherefords.com

Cell 406-439-4311 info@ehlkeherefords.com

FEMALE PRODUCTION SALE in September • Bulls sell Private Treaty

Feddes

Herefords

Dan 406-570-1602 drfeddes@msn.com

Tim 406-570-4771

tfeddes@msn.com www.feddes.com Modest Birth Massive Meat

2009 Churchill Road Manhattan, Montana 59741

“THE BEST IN LINE 1 BREEDING” Jack and Tresha Holden 3139 Valier Dupuyer Rd. • Valier, MT 59486 406-279-3301 • 406-279-3300 Ranch • 406-450-1029 Mobile www.holdenherefords.com

NEBRASKA

7 Mill Iron Ranch

Burl and Doug McMillan 210560 CR U • Gering, NE 69341 970-326-8391 • burl_mcmillan@yahoo.com

From I-80 exit 48 west of Sidney, Neb. south 1 1/4 miles, west 1 mile, south 3/4 mile

Herd sire: BB 1065 Domino 6081 • Cow herd: Mark Donald and Line 1

Quality Cattle That Work

Lowell and Carol 402-589-1347 48979 Nordic Rd. Spencer, NE 68777

Frenzen Polled Herefords

ANNUAL BULL SALE

Fourth Tuesday in March

Galen Frenzen 50802 N. Edgewood Rd. Fullerton, NE 68638 Galen 308-550-0237 Eric 308-550-0238

Females and club calves for sale private treaty.

August 2023 |

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
Don and Tammy Sims and Brittany and Amber
Arvid and Linda Eggen 406-895-2657 Box 292 • Plentywood, MT 59254 jbare@nemont.net Jay-De Lorrie J
E
Since 1898
and Shirley Bruce
Bar
Ranch
Richard
Hereford.org
69

Henkel Polled Herefords Pure Station Polled L1 Dominos

Gene

402-729-5866

Eric 402-239-9838

56095 715 Road • Fairbury, NE 68352 henkelhereford@hotmail.com

Denny and Dixie Hoffman • 406-425-0859

Jason and Kaycee Hoffman • 530-604-5096 Office 308-645-2279 • P.O. Box 287 • Thedford, NE 69166 jason@hoffmanranch.com • www.hoffmanranch.com

Milk, Muscle, Performance and Weight Outcross Pedigrees Bulls and females always for sale. Visitors always welcome!

Jack and Bev Beeson Wayne, NE 68787

Females that Produce

Prolific Disposition

402-375-3404

Cell 402-375-9027

Albert Moeller & Sons

7582 S Engleman Rd Grand Island, NE 68803 308-384-0979

Cattle for sale by Private Treaty and at Nebraska Cattlemen’s Classic

MINIATURE - CLASSIC HEREFORDS www.splittcreekranch.com

Shaun Brott 308-530-4161

North Platte, Nebraska 69101

Judy Splitt 308-530-1287 judysplitt@gmail.com

UPSTREAM RANCH

Annual Bull Sale • First Saturday in February 45060 Upstream Rd. • Taylor, NE 68879 Brent and Robin Meeks • 308-942-3195 upstreamranch@gmail.com www.upstreamcattle.com

P.O. Box 306 • Hyannis, NE 69350

James 308-458-2406

Bryan 308-458-2865 • Bob 308-458-2731 1417 Rd. 2100 Guide Rock, NE 68942-8099

Ron 402-756-3462

rnschutte@gtmc.net www.schutteandsons.net

BERNIE AND STACIE BUZANOWSKI Arthur, NE

308-726-2138

• 406-855-8288 cell

Oshkosh, NE 69154 • www.vannewkirkherefords.com

Joe: 308-778-6049 • Kolby: 308-778-6230 Quality Herefords Since 1892

NEVADA

“The Best of Both” Horned and Polled Genetics

Don, Skeeter, Kari, Brooke and Bryce P.O. Box 239 • Orovada, NV 89425 775-272-3152 Home • 775-272-3153 Fax 209-479-0287 Cell orovadaherefords@aol.com brumleyfarms.com

Horned and Polled Herefords

Bull & Female Sale

Sept. 11, 2023

Chris Beck, Mgr. 618-367-5397

Bob Coker, Owner 916-539-1987 640 Genoa Ln. Minden, NV 89423 www.genoalivestock.com

Mrnak Herefords West

Loren, Terrie, Hunter and Tanner PO Box 2412 • Minden, NV 89423 775-848-0160

lorenmrnak@aol.com www.mrnakherefordswest.com

AJ

Spindle 5 05-321-8808

Spindle 5 05-252-0228 P.O. Box 2670 Moriarty, NM 87035 www.billkingranch.com

9767 Quay Road O Nara Visa, NM 88430

Pérez - 575-403-7970

Kyle Pérez - 575-403-7971

Drew Pérez - 806-640-8340 Info@PerezCattleCo.com PerezCattleCo.com

PREDICTABLE GENETICS

Sheldon Wilson 575-451-7469 • cell 580-651-6000 1545 Dry Cimarron Hwy • Folsom, NM 88419

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
Stahoski -HerdsmanNEW JERSEY NEW MEXICO
Phil Harvey Jr. P.O. Box 40 Mesilla, NM 88046 575-524-9316 Cell: 575-644-6925 philharveyjr@comcast.net www.bhherefords.com Jim Bob Burnett 205 E. Cottonwood Rd. Lake Arthur, NM 88253 Cell: 575-365-8291 burnettjimbob@gmail.com
www.cornerstoneranch.net 575-355-2803
Leslie
Kevin
Ephesians 2:20
Tom
B&H HEREFORDS
cornerstone@plateautel.net
• 575-355-6621 616 Pecan Dr., Ft. Sumner, NM 88119 LaMoyne and Opal Peters
and Glenda Armstrong
and Renee Grant
Bill King 5 05-220-9909
Becky
Michael
EAT MORE BEEF 70 | August 2023 Hereford.org

NEW YORK

NORTH DAKOTA

Timothy Dennis 315-536-2769

315-856-0183 cell

tdennis@trilata.com

3550 Old County Rd. Penn Yan, NY 14527

HOME OF CHURCHILL BROADWAY 104J

SPRING POND FARM

John and Ted Kriese – 4385 Italy Hill Road – Branchport, NY 14418 315-856-0234

hereford@frontiernet.net

www.fingerlakescattle.com

BREEDING CATTLE BUILT FROM THE GROUND UP

NORTH CAROLINA

Brent Creech 14926 Taylor’s Mill Rd. Zebulon, NC 27597

919-801-7561

14503 91st St. S.W.Bowman, ND 58623 www.mrnakherefords.com

OHIO

Mohican Polled Hereford

4551 S.R. 514 Glenmont, OH 44628

Alexis

Mohican

OKLAHOMA

Farm

Robbie & Tracie Gipson 918-774-4795

g4gcattleco@gmail.com

Bulls & Females available for sale private treaty

Ralph & Stephanie Kinder, Owners 790250 S Hwy 177 Carney, OK 74832 (405) 714-3101 ralph@headquartersranch.com headquartersranch.com

DENNIS RANCH

23731 NS 157 Rd. Laverne, OK 73848 Milton 580-273-9494 Van 580-552-1555 van1messner@gmail.com

Paul Laubach 72251 N 2080 Rd • Leedey, OK 73654 Cell 580-822-5089 • paul@pandrherefords.com PandRHerefords.com

TRENT RAY

C. Porter Claxton Jr. 240 Upper Flat Creek Rd. Weaverville, NC 28787

www.tmfherefords.com tmfherefords@icloud.com Farm LLC

828-645-9127

cpcfarm@msn.com

Sales: Wayne Welch 828-768-3024

Visit our website to see current offering — www.claxtonfarmcattle.com

Ten

T ripleTT polled Herefords

James Triplett 127 Roseman Ln. • Statesville, NC 28625

704-876-3148 (evening) 704-872-7550 (daytime)

VisiT ors Welcome

Bulls and Females For Sale Private Treaty

Will-Via Polled Herefords

Lavette and Brenda Teeter

2075 Landis Hwy. (NC Hwy. 152) Mooresville, NC 28115

704-662-5262

Bulls & Females available for sale private treaty

BULLS

12700 E. Lone Chimney Road Glencoe, OK 74032 309-299-2387

trcattleco@hotmail.com

BULLS FOR SALE YEAR-ROUND

OREGON

Registered Herefords George and Karen Sprague 85777 Vilhauer • Eugene, OR 97405 541-465-2188 gks@bar1ranch.com • www.bar1ranch.com

Mike and Lotsee Spradling 918-640-7711 918-245-8854

Registered Polled Herefords Pecans flyinggranchss@aol.com

David and Lynda Bird 45863 Crow Rd. • Halfway, OR 97834 541-742-5436 • Cell 541-403-2828 • bird@pinetel.com

|

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
J.
miles north of Asheville, N.C., on future I-26 West
Brent 701-206-0604 Jenna 701-290-7218 Terry 701-523-6368 Andy 701-206-1095
Conard and Nancy Stitzlein 330-378-3421
Matt Stitzlein 330-231-0708
Stitzlein 330-231-9538 stitz@mohicanfarms.com
West 3100 Sportsman Park Rd. Laurel, MT 59044 Phone/Fax 406-633-2600
Terry Powlesland 406-670-8529 mohicanw@yahoo.com www.mohicanpolledherefords.com
22990
Rd., Terral, OK 73569 REGISTERED AND COMMERCIAL HEREFORDS 580-662-9211 • 580-757-2515 • Cell 940-704-9682
SINCE 1916
E. 2090
FOR SALE Don Moler 100 Bonita Dr. Elk City, OK 73644 580-497-6162 Herd Bulls & Donor Females For Sale P.O. Box 166 • Caddo, OK 74729 Alan Dufur — 580-775-3830 Flying Ranch 19402 W. Hwy. 51 P.O. Box 434 Sand Springs, OK 74063
1
Hereford.org
2023
71
August

PENNSYLVANIA

Don and Madeline Hennon Sewickley, PA 15143 412-741-2883

Fax 412-741-2883

Robert Glenn, manager 724-748-4303 www.barhfarm.com

SOUTH DAKOTA

Bar JZ Ranches

Homozygous Polled Herefords

Don, Peg, Seth and Bridget Zilverberg 18542 326th Ave. Holabird, SD 57540 605-852-2966 www.barjz.com cattle@barjz.com

75th Annual Production Sale Feb. 20, 2024

Gerald and Janelle Bischoff 20025 399th Ave., Huron, SD 37350 Gerald 605-350-0979

Garret 605-461-1555

Matt 605-350-0980 ravinecr@santel.net • www.ravinecreekranch.com

Annual Production Sale - 2nd Wednesday in March

HEREFORDS

Gordon and Thordys 39462 178th St. Frankfort, SD 57440 605-472-0619

Michael and Becky 605-224-4187 605-870-0052 blumeherf@yahoo.com

e GGers sOut H view farms

Tim and Philip Eggers 25750 476th Ave., Sioux Falls, SD 57104 Tim cell 605-929-6560 Philip cell 605-351-5438 eggerssouthviewfarms@gmail.com

I-29 Bull Run Sale 2nd Saturday in March

21115 344th Ave. Ree Heights, SD 57371

Keith, Cheryl, Erin and Matt Fawcett • 605-870-0161 Dan, Kyla, Hollis and Ivy Fawcett • 605-870-6172 Weston, Kristin, Falon and Jensen Kusser www.fawcettselmcreekranch.com

SOUTH CAROLINA

P.O.

Lance Pankratz, owner

Office 605-925-7611

Cell 605-359-9221

Home 605-925-4283

Fax 605-925-4354

44130 279th St. Freeman, SD 57029

lagrand@gwtc.net www.lagrandranch.com

Ollerich Brothers Herefords

29188 303 Ave., Clearfield, SD 57580 605-557-3246

Jerome 605-842-5212 • jeromeo@goldenwest.net

James 605-359-4006

Rausch Herefords

14831 Hereford Rd., Hoven, SD 57450

Shannon 605-769-0203

Jacob 605-769-0552 Peter 605-281–0471 47229 232 St. Colman, SD 57017

jacob@rauschherefords.com • RauschHerefords.com

America’s #1 Dams of Distinction Cow herd

• Private Sales Year-round

• Bull and Female Sale Third Monday in February

Consignment sales and private treaty

Cody Williams, Cell 605-695-0931

Dave Stenberg 605-997-2594 • Cell 605-530-6002

Lindsey Wolles 605-496-2487

Bill and Paula Thorstenson 30491 131st St. • Selby, SD 57472 605-649-7940 • Cell 605-845-6108 wpthorstenson@venturecomm.net paulathorstenson@yahoo.com

TENNESSEE

Mark

Kay Frederickson 19975 Bear Ridge Rd. Spearfish, SD 57783

605-642-2139 Cell 605-645-4934

PYRAMID BEEF

Bull Sale

First Saturday in December

Nate and

Cell 605-254-4872 Shawn and Sarah Tatman 307-673-4381

Hoffman Herefords

Horned & Polled Herefords

11341 357th Ave. • Leola, SD 57456 Colin 605-216-7506 • Miles 605-277-5048 cmbhoffman@msn.com www.hoffmanherefords.com

JBN

Registered Herefords

Jim and Jeannine Bockwoldt 22370 152nd Place, Box Elder, SD 57719 605-923-2366

jbnlivestock@rushmore.com • www.jbnlivestock.com

Jim and Kay Coley and Family

140 Morgan Rd., Lafayette, TN 37083 615-804-2221 • coleyherefords@gmail.com www.coleyherefords.com

PO Box 215, Cross Plains, TN 37049 615-478-4483 billymjackson@aol.com website: jacksonfarmsherefords.com

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION REGISTERED HORNED HEREFORDS “Breeding with the Commercial Cattleman in Mind” Home 541-576-2431 Ken cell 541-403-1044 79337 Soto Lane Fort Rock, OR 97735 ijhufford@yahoo.com www.huffordherefords.com
OR
Linda Sims 451 N.W. Quarry Rd. Albany,
97321
Cell 541-990-8038 Office 541-926-5640 vollstedtfarms@comcast.net
Box 1057 • Seneca, SC 29679 864-882-1890 • Deryl cell 864-324-3268
• Grass Fed Cattle
deryl@keeserealtysc.com
and Mary Jayna Frederickson
l ivestOCk
314
37887
Bulls and Females Available Johnny, Tanuja, Jonathan & Justin Dagley Ellis & Lovalene Heidel
Letory Rd. Wartburg,TN
mudcreekFarms@msn.com
Creek Rd.
OR 97814
Jonathan cell 865-803-9947 Home 423-346-7304 42590 Salmon
• Baker City,
Jr.
and Quarter Horses Annual
Monday In March Cattle Co. “Your Eastern Oregon Range Bull Source” Registered Herefords and Quarter Horses
and Cori Anderson 47295 Izee Paulina Ln. Canyon City, OR 97820 541-477-3816 M.T. 541-377-0030 Cori 541-377-3347 72 | August 2023 Hereford.org
Bob Harrell
541-403-2210 Don Schafer 541-403-0008 Registered Hereford Cattle
Sale First
M.T.

Jerry Roberson 615-325-1883 P.O. Box 492 Portland, TN 37148

Mike Rogan 1662 McKinney Chapel Rd. Rogersville, TN 37857 423-272-5018 423-754-1213 Cell roganfarm@yahoo.com

Steven Lee 615-799-8085 cell 615-456-6165

5121 Bedford Creek Rd., Franklin, TN 37064 triplelranch@msn.com • sleehereford@gmail.com www.lllranch.com

Woodard Hereford Farms

Since 1945 – Quality Line 1 Cattle For Sale!

Winn Woodard 615-389-2624 • Phil Spicer 615-351-2810

4948 William Woodard R d. S pringfield , TN 37172

TEXAS

ATLAS FARMS

Your source for top end bulls and females.

Jimmy, Claudia and Precious Atlas 4920 CR 401 • Grandview, TX 76050 214-202-5178 • 817-456-4691 atlasfarms@sbcglobal.net

Bill or Chad Breeding 1301 N. Lions • P.O. Box 186 8 06-868-4661 or 806-570-9554 Miami, TX 79059 b reeder@amaonline.com

Pete and Angela Case P.O. Box 240, Mertzon, TX 76941 325-650-6209 • pete@caseranch.com www.caseranch.com

Jack & Lyn Chastain 3924 Burkett Dr Ft. Worth, TX 76116 817-821-3544

Farm located at Mineral Wells, TX

DUDLEY BROS.

Box 10, Comanche, TX 76442 • Office 325-356-2284 John Dudley 325-642-0745 Tom Dudley 325-642-0748 john@dudleybros.com www.DudleyBros.com Registered Herefords Since 1938

Harry and Cheryl Grett 512-303-5714

P.O. Box 969 Elgin, TX 78621 g3ranch@aol.com

NOLAN

Scott, Alise, Ilissa, Bethany and Audrey 1950 Skylark Rd. • Gilmer, TX 75645 nolanherefords@aol.com Res. 903-797-6131 Cell 903-738-5636

Terri Barber 817-727-6107

Jason Barber 817-718-5821

Dale Barber 806-673-1965

Justin Barber 806-681-5528

Brett Barber 806-681-2457

Mary Barber 806-930-6917 10175 F.M. 3138

• Channing, TX 79018 www.barberranch.com • office@barberranch.com

Maynard and Sandi Warnken Kevin Warnken, manager P.O. Drawer 29 • Schulenburg, TX 78956 979-561-8846 • 979-561-8867 fax Kevin cell 979-743-0619 rockinw@cvctx.com • rockinwranch.net

Randy Wood, manager 325-396-5526

5749 Rocking Chair Ln. Ft. McKavett, TX 76841 www.therockingchairranch.com

Raising cattle in Texas since 1855

Joey and Susan Skrivanek, owners 407 W. Mustang • Caldwell, TX 77836 Cell 979-224-4698 • Office 979-567-3131 j.skrivanekranch@outlook.com

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
7787 ROCKY RIDGE LN. MADISONVILLE, TX 77864 Office 936-349-0439
From Madisonville, go S on I-45 to Exit #136, go E 2 miles to H2 Gates. h2ranch@rodzoo.com
Haygood
lee@indianmoundranch.com indianmoundranch.com
Herefords 116
Office
BULLS OUT OF GOOD MILKING FEMALES FOR SALE AT ALL TIMES. Stop by for a visit. You will not be disappointed!
H2Ranch@rodzoo.com www.h2ranchandcattle.com
Lee & Jacqui
923 Hillside Ave. Canadian, TX 79014 806-323-2906
Noack
E. Bell Ave. Rockdale, TX 76567 Cell 979-218-0065
512-446-6200
HEREFORDS
9 miles east of
21 or 15
of
on Hwy. 21 Hereford.org August 2023
73
Caldwell on Hwy.
miles west
Bryan-College Station
|

WISCONSIN

Larry Woodson Bonham, TX 214-491-7017

MARBLELATION!

larrywoodson@gmail.com www.stillriverranch.com

SUNNY HILL RANCH

Horned and Polled

Pete Johnson, owner St Hwy 94 • Lufkin, TX 75904 936-465-1672 • pljmhj@yahoo.com

http://www.sunnyhillranchherefords.com Southeast Texas Bull Sale Headquarters

4609 Airport Freeway Ft. Worth, Texas 76117 817-831-3161

texashereford@sbcglobal.net www.texashereford.org

williams family H erefOrds

Herb and Susan Williams, Owners P.O. Box 567, Decatur, TX 76234

Herb Cell 940-393-1651 • Office/Ranch 940-466-3381 Fax 940-466-7237 Williamsfamilyherefords.com • herbsusan@msn.com

Since 1891, family owned and operated for five generations! Hwy. 51 north, 10 miles from Decatur, Texas Registered/Commercial Hereford Cattle

UTAH

Rod Curtis 435-770-0509 rod@cachefeeds.com herefords1@hotmail.com

Bill and Linda Johnson 3350 N. St. Rd. 32 Marion, UT 84036 435-783-4455 bjohn@allwest.net

Cattle for sale at the ranch

JB Herefords

3847 W. 2200 S. • Wellsville, UT 84339 www.jbherefords.com

Billy Jensen 435-764-2422 Kyson Smith 435-421-9032 jbherefords@gmail.com

Jensen Brothers Herefords – Since 1920

Jonathan and Craig Johansen Castle Dale, UT • 435-650-8466 johansenherefords@gmail.com www.johansenherefords.com Line One Performance Breeding Since 1979

Jake Rees 801-668-8613 Scott Rees 801-949-8960 Roger Rees, DVM 801-913-5747 Herefords & Angus ReesCattle.com reescattle@gmail.com

2235 E. Rees Ln.•Morgan , UT 84050

VIRGINIA

Featuring Polled Descendants of J215

Thistle Tree Farm

Linda Lonas P.O. Box 187 • Purcellville, VA 20134 703-850-5501 Cell • 703-368-5812 Office

WASHINGTON

Bill and Terrilie Cox 688 Pataha St. Pomeroy, WA 99347 509-566-7050 cell cxranch@live.com

Kevin and Janice Bennett 3752 Ollie Bell Rd. Benton, WI 53803 608-778-8685 kevinjanicebennett@gmail.com www.sandrockranchherefords.com

WYOMING

Jay and Janice Berry 3049 C.R. 225 Cheyenne, WY 82009 307-634-5178 • www.wherecowmenbuybulls.com

LARGENT and SONS

McClun’s Lazy JM Ranch

Polled

SINCE 1943

DIAMOND M RANCH

SELLING 1,500 HEREFORDS ANNUALLY “The great feedlot performance cattle”

The McIrvins Box 99 Laurier, WA 509-684-4380

Winter Headquarters 646 Lake Rd. Burbank, WA 99323 509-545-5676

Annual

WEST VIRGINIA

westfall POlled H erefOrds

Jim Westfall, owner 304-927-2104 • cell 304-377-1247 jimwestfall2104@gmail.com

Lucille Westfall, herdsman 304-532-9351

1109 Triplett Rd. • Spencer, WV 25276

Bulls and Females For Sale

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
P.O. Box
307-738-2443
Hereford Cattle Since 1902
66 • Kaycee, WY 82639
or 307-267-3229 Cell Sale Date – Nov. 16, 2023 largentandsons@yahoo.com www.largentandsons.com
1929
Private Treaty Sales and Annual Production Sale in April Selling Herefords for 80 years P.O. Box 15, Ft. Bridger, WY 82933 Dale 307-780-8232 Ron 307-747-3897
Herefords and Angus Raising Herefords since 1967 Jim and Jerri McClun and Family
Rd. 60 • Veteran, WY 82243 • 307-837-2524 Cell 307-534-5141 • jkmcclun@wyomail.com www.mcclunranch.com
HEREFORDS FOR TODAY’S CATTLEMAN N ed and Jan Ward 406-757-0600 Ned (c) 307-751-8298 • Jan (c) 307-751-9470 Bell Ward 307-751-6922 • Jake Bare 406-780-0056 North Ranch: 2637 Adsit Rd., Decket, MT 59025 South Ranch: 888 Lower Prairie Dog Rd., Sheridan, WY 82801 Mailing address: PO Box B, Sheridan, WY 82801 njwardherefords@gmail.com www.NJWHerefords.com Ochsner-Roth Cattle Co. Blake: 307-532-3282 Steve Roth: 307-575-5258 Rustin Roth: 307-575-2709 BW: 307-575-6772 Rodney: 307-575-2589 ochsnerranch@gmail.com 10672 Van Tassell Road Torrington, WY 82240 Annually selling over 200 Hereford and Angus Bulls via private treaty www.qualitybulls.com
Sale — Fourth Wednesday in October
74 | August 2023 Hereford.org

BILL WILHELM • 1046 RIFLE PIT RD., SUNDANCE, WY 82729

CANADA

Billy Elmhirst R.R. 1 Indian River, ON Canada K0L 2B0 705-295-2708 • ircc@nexicom.net elmlodgeherefords.freeyellow.com

Your Source For Success

MEDONTE HIGHLANDS Polled Herefords Jack McAughey K evin Brown 905-625-3151 705 -330-4663 Farm • Orillia, Ont. 705-326-6889 Business Office: 3055 Universal Dr., Mississauga, Ont. L4X 2E2

SERVICES

Eddie Burks , Auctioneer 531 Rick Rd. Park City, KY 42160 270-991-6398 Cell endburks@hotmail.com

7710 North State Rd 56 Vevay, IN

www.JamesFBessler.com Jim@JamesFBessler.com

Jim Bessler 815-762-2641 4812 McBreyer Pl. Fort Worth, TX 76244-6083 O: 817-562-8980 • Fax: 817-562-8981

Joel Birdwell, Auctioneer 5880 State Hwy. 33 Kingfisher, OK 73750

Home: 405-375-6630

Cell: 405-368-1058

HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION
IN LINE 1 BREEDING •
GENETICS
EXCELLENCE
SELECT POLLED
47043 540-336-2737 254-716-5735 541 State Hwy. 75 N. clayemmons@hotmail.com Fairfield, TX 75840 EMMONS UGC Certified Clay Emmons • Pregnancy ELISA testing • BVD PI testing • NIR Feed & Forage testing C. Scanlon Daniels, DVM PO Box 1150 3216 US Hwy 54 East Dalhart, TX 79022 806-244-7851 office 806-333-2829 mobile www.circleh.info scanlon@circleh.info LATHROP LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION USDA Approved Quarantine Center Serving O’Hare Field and All Export Points 35W090 Lathrop Lane, Dundee, IL 60118 Randy Lathrop 847-426-5009 or 428-5806 Fax 847-428-3788 Matt C. Sims Auction, Inc. • P.O. Box 1219 • Edmond, OK 73083 405-641-6081 • matt@mcsauction.com • www.mcsauction.com Mark C. Sims Elgin, OK 580-595-0901 simsplusllc@gmail.com www.simsplusllc.com AUCTIONEER SHOP Hereford Hereford.org August 2023 | 75
HEREFORD SEEDSTOCK SECTION Stay connected with Hereford happenings by email thru our weekly correspondence. Wednesdays – SALES DIGEST Friday – HEREFORD HEADLINES Sign up now by sending an email to: outreach@hereford.org Hereford World DEADLINES: CALL FOR AD RATES ISSUE ................ CLOSING DATE Jan. 2024* ............... Nov. 25 Feb. 2024* ............... Dec. 26 March 2024 ............... Jan. 25 AI Book 2024 .............. Jan. 25 April 2024 ................ Feb. 27 May/June 2024 .......... March 27 July 2024 Early bird ............... April 26 Final .................... May 24 Aug. 2024* ............... June 25 Sept. 2023 ................ July 25 Oct. 2023* ............... Aug. 25 Nov. 2023 ................ Sept. 25 Dec. 2023 ................. Oct. 25 *Indicates tabloid issue Send ad copy, pictures, etc. to your field representative or the Hereford World Advertising Coordinator Alison Marx 816-842-3757 • 816-243-1314 Fax amarx@hereford.org DALE STITH Auctioneer 5239 Old Sardis Pike Mays Lick, KY 41055 918-760-1550 dalestith@yahoo.com 121 Jackson St. Plain City, OH 43064 Phone: 614-403-0726 WEST VIRGINIA HEREFORD BREEDERS DAVID LAW & SONS Polled Herefords Since 1954 192 Ruger Dr. Harrisville, WV 26362 Butch 304-643-4438 Certified and Accredited lawherefords@yahoo.com McDonald Polled Herefords Mike McDonald, DVM and Family 534 Riverbend Road Lost Creek, WV 26385 304-745-3870 Office 304-677-5944 Cell
R.G. Knotts Family 63 Henderson Ridge Road Fairmont, WV 26554
304-612-3795
304-265-0005 Dnsk0603@gmail.com
Herefords
Brothers Farm & Litton Livestock
Polled Herefords Since 1960 Certified and Accredited Herd Martin & Joe Cottle-Founders Neil Litton-Operator 1194 Armstrong Road Summersville, WV 26651 Neil 304-618-7313 forestking02@gmail.com westfall POLLED HEREFORDS Jim Westfall, owner 304-927-2104 • 304-377-1247 cell jimwestfall2104@gmail.com Lucille Westfall, herdsman 304-532-9351 1109 Triplett Rd. Spencer, WV 25276 Bulls and Females For Sale Grandview Hereford Farm Quality Hereford Cattle Ken and Chris Scott 2586 Grandview Rd. Beaver, WV 25813 Ken 304-573-0844 Chris 304-228-5524 chance37@suddenlink.net ghf 5683 Rocky Step Rd. Winfield, WV 25213 www.grassyrunfarms.com Gary Kale, Owner Aaron Glascock, General Manager 304-312-7060
Billman, Herdsman 330-432-3267 76 | August 2023 Hereford.org
The
Dave
Robert
Polled
Cottle
Quality
Derik

https://iowahereford.org

August Calendar of Events

Aug.

Iowa

Iowa

Aug.

Iowa

Iowa

Stops

FOR

Aug.

Aug.

PETERSEN HEREFORDS

Bill’s

Bill and Becky Goehring 2634 Clearwood Ave. Libertyville, IA 52567
cell
1022 Trail Ave. Wilton, IA 52778 Charles Rife 563-506-3751 Delaney Rife • Kennedy Rife Jack Rife 515-974-9600
Mach 563-260-8771
Mach • Jessica Mach
and Joell Deppe with boys - Montana, Chance, Austin and Nick 21938 150th St.
IA 52060
641-919-9365 keosalebarn@netins.net www.keosauquasaleco.com IOWA HEREFORD BREEDERS
Emma
Tyler
John
Maquoketa,
home phone: 563-672-3531
John, cell 563-599-5035
and Denise Amos Indianola, Iowa 515-961-5847 515-238-9852 Cell cdamos@msn.com www.amosherefordfarm.com The Tom and Jo Heidt Family 3388 240th St. Lockridge, IA 52635 Cell 608-574-2309 Mike Sorensen and Family Box 221, Greenfield, IA 50849 Mike 641-745-7949 mikelpi@yahoo.com www.mikesorensenfamily.com FRANK JACKSON HEREFORD FARMS Registered Herefords since 1890 Brian ‑ Brad ‑ Craig ‑ Nicole Craig Jackson 319‑ 4 80 ‑1436 Follow us on Facebook & Instagram www.jacksonherefordfarms.com www.facebook.com/ JacksonHerefordFarms/
Joell, cell 563-599-5038 josiedeppe@gmail.com webcowsdeppebros.com Craig
Brent, Robin, Dylan and Nicole 2169 290th Ave. DeWitt, IA 52742 563-357-9849 bapete@iowatelecom.net Online source for Hereford cattle • Directory & Membership Listing • Classified listings www.iowahereford.org
and Sara Hulbert 419-308-7055
and Marytha Pitt 515-290-1383 pitt@iowatelecom.net www.pittfarms.com
and Allison Coughenour 515-290-8905 2023 IOWA HEREFORD BREEDERS ASSN.
Josiah
John
TJ
15th
State Fair 4-H Breeding Show
16th
State Fair 4-H Market Beef Show & Iowa Hereford Steer Futurity
17th
State Fair Open Hereford Show
27th
Hereford Tour / Northwest Iowa
include Johnson Herefords, Weeping Fox Ranch, Lunch at Crazy Bob’s in Hartley, TransOva Genetics and Kooiker Feedyard.
MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Simpson, Secretary 515-833-2991 • becky@iowahereford.org
Becky
A A A A A A A A A Hereford.org August 2023 | 77

Advertisers’ Index

ALABAMA Debter Hereford Farm . . 33, 64, 65 Tennessee River Music 65 CALIFORNIA Gillibrand Cattle Co , P W 65 Lambert Ranch . . . . . . 65 McDougald Herefords 65 Morrell Ranches 65 Pedretti Ranches 65 Sierra Ranches 65 Sonoma Mountain Herefords . . 65 Wiemer Cattle Co 65
Campbell, James T 65 Clark Anvil Ranch . . . 65 Cline Registered Herefords 65 Coleman Herefords 65 Coyote Ridge Ranch 65 Ernst Herefords 21, 65 Fuchs Herefords, Mike . . . 65 Hanging W Herefords 65 Kubin Hereford Ranch 65 Leroux Land & Cattle 65 Robb & Sons, Tom . . . 65 Shaffer Herefords . . . 65 Sidwell Herefords 66 Strang Herefords 66 GEORGIA CES Herefords & Angus . . . 64 Greenview Farms Inc 3, 66 HME Herefords 64 MTM Polled Herefords 44 Predestined Cattle Co . . . . 64 White Hawk Ranch . . . . . IBC IDAHO Colyer Herefords & Angus 66 Daniels Hereford Ranch . . . 66 Eagle Canyon Ranch . . . . 66 Elkington Polled Herefords 66 JBB/AL Herefords 66 Shaw Cattle Co 66 Wooden Shoe Farms . . . . 66
Bafford Farms 59 Baker Farms 66 Behrends Farms . . . . . 59 Benedict Herefords . . . . . 59 Bixler Herefords 66 Bob-O-Lou Herefords 66 Burns Polled Hereford Farm 58, 66 Crane Herefords . . . . . . . 59 Edenburn Family Farm 59 Ellis Farms 7, 66 Entwistle Herefords 58 Eubank Farms 66 Fancy Creek Farm of the Prairie Cross . 58 Fauth Polled Herefords 59 Fleisher Farms 58, 66 Happ Herefords 66 Knott Farm 66 Lorenzen Farms . . . . . . 23, 59 Lowderman Cattle Co 59 McCaskill Farms 58 Milligan Herefords 66 Moffett Farms 58 Mud Creek Farms . . . . . 58 Nature’s Acres 58 Newbold Farms Inc 66 Oak Hill Farm 66 Paquette Hereford Farm . 58, 66 Parish Farms 59 Plainview Stock Farms 59 Prairie Cross, The 58 Prairie Meadow Herefords 66 Prairie Rose Cattle Co . . 58 Purple Reign 67 RGR Cattle Co 59 River Ridge Ranch & Cattle Co 67 Sayre Hereford Farm . . . 67 Shingle Oaks Polled Herefords . 67 Stephens and Loehr Herefords 67 Stumpf Land & Cattle 67 West Wind Herefords 67 Young Cattle Co . . . 58 INDIANA A&H Herefords 63 Able Acres 63 Clinkenbeard Farms & Sons 63 Coal Creek Land and Cattle LLC . 63 Deatsman Farm 63 Elzemeyer Polled Herefords 63 Everhart Farms 63 Gerber Land & Cattle . . . . . 67 Greenwood Family Herefords . 63 Gunn Brothers Cattle Co 63 Hayhurst Farms 63 Kesling Polled Herefords 67 Laudeman Family, Gale . . . . . 67 McFatridge Cattle Co 67 Simpson Family Herefords 63 IOWA Amos Hereford Farm . . . . 77 Deppe Bros Cattle Co . . . . 77 Goehring Herefords 77 Iowa Hereford Breeders Assn 77 Jackson Hereford Farms 77 K7 Herefords . . . . . . . . 77 Petersen Herefords 77 Pitt Farms Herefords 77 R&R Cattle Co 77 Sorensen Family, Mike 77 Stream Cattle Co . . . . . . . 67 Wiese & Sons 67 KANSAS Brannan & Reinhardt Polled Herefords 67 Davis Herefords . . . . . 67 Douthit Herefords 67 GLM Herefords 67 Grimmel Schaake Cattle Co 67 Herbel Herefords 67 Jamison Herefords . . . . 67 Jensen Bros 67 Malone Hereford Farm 49 Mill Creek Ranch 67 MM Ranch Polled Herefords 67 Oleen Cattle Co . . . . . . 68 Sandhill Farms 68 Schu-Lar Herefords LLC 68 Springhill Herefords 68 Umberger Polled Herefords 68 VJS Polled Herefords . . . . . 68 KENTUCKY 3R Herefords 44 Botkin Polled Herefords 68 Boyd Beef Cattle 68 Chambliss Hereford Farms 68 Clifford Farms . . . . 44 Dogwood Farm 44 JMS Polled Herefords 44 Matheny Herefords 64, 68 Tucker Stock Farms 68 Wells Farm . . . . . 44 MARYLAND Church View Farm 80 East Side Farm 43, 68, 80 Fountain Valley Farm . . . 80 Grimmel Girls Show Cattle 68 SCH Polled Herefords 68 MICHIGAN Bramschreiber Hereford Farm . 62 Breasbois Farms 62 Cedar Creek Herefords 62 Cottonwood Springs 62 Grand Meadows Farm . . . . 62 Hanson’s Double G Herefords . . 68 MacNaughton, Ron and Jill 62 McDonald Farm 19, 62 Michigan Hereford Assn 62 PCR Herefords . . . . . 62 Sugar Sweet Ranch . . . . 62 MINNESOTA DaKitch Hereford Farms 68 Delaney Herefords . . . 68 Krogstad Polled Herefords . . 68 Lawrence Herefords 68 Springwater Polled Herefords 68 MISSISSIPPI Broadlawn Farm Polled Herefords 64 Caldwell Hereford Ranch 68 Leaning Cedar Herefords 68 McGuffee Polled Herefords 68 S and W Herefords . . . 69 MISSOURI 417’s Finest Hereford Female Sale 37 AbraKadabra Cattle Co 49 Bellis Family, Jim D . . . . 49 Biglieni Farms 69 Blue Ribbon Farms 48 Bonebrake Herefords 48, 69 Bradshaw Ranch 48 Central Missouri Polled Hereford Assn . 48 Doss Hereford Farms 49 Duvall Polled Herefords 48 Falling Timber Farm 69 Findley Farms 69 Harding Bros Herefords . . 69 High Prairie Farm 69 Illg Cattle Co 69 Journagan Ranch/Missouri State University 49, 69 Lacy’s Red Angus & Polled Herefords 48 McMillen’s Toothacre Ranch 49 Mead Farms 48 Menzies Cattle Co LLC 49 Miller Herefords . . . . 48 Reed Farms 49 Reynolds Herefords 48 Shoenberger Polled Herefords 49, 69 Steinbeck Farms 48 WMC Cattle Co 49 WPH Ranch 48 MONTANA Churchill Cattle Co IFC, 29 Cooper Hereford Ranch 69 Curlew Cattle Co 69 Ehlke Herefords . . . . . . 69 Feddes Herefords 69 Holden Herefords 17, 69 J Bar E Herefords 69 L Bar W Cattle Co 69 McMurry Cattle . . . . . . 69 Mohican West 71 Schock Hereford Ranch 69 Thomas Herefords 69 Wichman Herefords . . . 69 NEBRASKA 7 Mill Iron Ranch 69 Fisher Family, Lowell 69 Frenzen Polled Herefords 69 Henkel Polled Herefords . . 70 Hoffman Ranch 70 JB Ranch Polled Herefords 70 Kolt Cattle Co 45 Moeller & Sons, Albert . . . . 70 Monahan Cattle Co . . . . . 70 Ridder Hereford Ranch 70 Schutte & Sons 70 Snowshoe Cattle Co 70 Splitt Creek Ranch . . . . . . 70 Upstream Ranch 70 Valley Creek Ranch 70 Van Newkirk Herefords 70 NEVADA Brumley Farms . . . . . . . 70 Genoa Livestock 25, 70 Mrnak Hereford Ranch 70 NEW JERSEY Grass Pond Farm . . . . . . 70 NEW MEXICO B&H Herefords 70 Copeland & Sons Herefords LLC . . 70 Cornerstone Ranch 70 King Herefords 70 Pérez Cattle Co 70 West Star Herefords 70 NEW YORK Glade Haven Herefords 71 Spring Pond Farm 71 Stone House Farm 71 NORTH CAROLINA Brent Creech Taylor’s Mill Farm 71 Claxton Farm LLC 71 Five J’s Cattle Co 1, 44 Four B Farm . . . . . . . . 64 P&J Farms 64 Rhyneland Farms 80 Triplett Polled Herefords 71 W&A Hereford Farm 80 Will-Via Polled Herefords . . . . 71 NORTH DAKOTA Mrnak Hereford Ranch 71 OHIO Berg Polled Herefords . . . 40 Buckeye Hereford Assn 40 J&L Cattle Services 40 Keets Herefords 40 Mohican Polled Hereford Farm 40, 71 Ostgaard Cattle Co . . . . 40 Pitt Farms Herefords 77 Rippling Rock Hereford Farm 40 Sunny Side Farm 40 Sunnyside Stock Farms 40 Switzerland of Ohio Polled Hereford Assn 40 Twin Hills Farms 40 OKLAHOMA Dennis Ranch . . . . 71 Dufur Herefords 71 Flying G Ranch 71 G4G Cattle Co 71 Headquarters Herefords 71 Loewen Herefords . . . 71 Messner Herefords 71 Moler, Don 71 P&R Herefords LLC 71 T/R Cattle Co . . . . . 71 OREGON Bar One Ranch 71 Bird Herefords 71 Harrell Hereford Ranch 72 High Desert Cattle Co . . . 72 Hufford’s Herefords 72 Vollstedt Farms Polled Herefords 72 PENNSYLVANIA Bar-H Farms . . . . 72 Deana Jak Farms Inc 72 Flat Stone Lick BC Keystone International Livestock Expo 18 Slaytons’ BearDance . . . 80 Stone Ridge Manor . . . 80 SOUTH CAROLINA Forrest Polled Herefords 44 Fowken Farm . . . . 44 Keese Herefords . . . . 72 SOUTH DAKOTA Bar JZ Ranches 72 Bischoff’s Ravine Creek Ranch . 72 Blume Herefords . . . 72 Eggers Southview Farms 72 Fawcett’s Elm Creek Ranch 72 Frederickson Ranch 72 Hoffman Herefords . . . 72 JBN Livestock 72 LaGrand Angus and Hereford Ranch 72 Ollerich Brothers Herefords 72 Rausch Herefords 72 Stenberg Herefords . . . 72 Thorstenson Hereford Ranch 72 TENNESSEE Candy Meadow Farms 44 Coley Herefords . . . . 72 Day Ridge Farm 64 East Tennessee Hereford Assn 34 Jackson Farms 64, 72 Mud Creek Farms 72 Parker Bros . . . . . 44
COLORADO
ILLINOIS
AHA CORNER 78 | August 2023 Hereford.org

“Calendar of Events” is a listing of Hereford sales and events known to our staff. Italicized dates denote shows and events. Non-italicized dates denote sales. To make the calendar concise we have used the following abbreviations: association, assn.; international, int’l; junior, jr.; mountain, mtn.; national, nat’l; northeast, NE; northwest, NW; performance tested, PT; southeast, SE; southwest, SW; and university, Un.

17 Mohican West Herefords Female Sale, Laurel, Mont.

17 Oklahoma State Fair Open Show, Oklahoma City

22 Sierra Ranches Western Treasures Vol. VII, Modesto, Calif.

23 417’s Finest Hereford Sale, Fair Grove, Mo.

23 Forrest Polled Herefords Production Sale, Saluda, S.C.

23 Golden Harvest Sale, Fremont, Mich.

23 The Big E Hereford Open Show, W. Springfield, Mass.

24 WMC Cattle Co. Ladies of The Ozarks Female Sale, Wasola, Mo.

25 Ad deadline for November

Hereford World

27 Ernst Herefords Complete Dispersal, Greeley, Colo.

29 West Virginia Polled Hereford Assn. Mtn. State Spectacular Fall Sale, Weston

29 World Beef Expo Open Show, Milwaukee, Wis.

30 Delaney Herefords/Atkins Herefords

Genetic Opportunity Sale, Tea, S.D.

30 East Texas State Fair Open Show, Tyler

30 Indiana Hereford Extravaganza Sale & Annual Meeting, Lebanon

Highlands Polled Herefords Autumn Alliance XLI Sale, Orillia, Ontario

Roberson’s Polled Herefords 73 Rogan Farms Herefords 73 Triple L Ranch . . . . . 73 Walker Herefords 5 Woodard Hereford Farms 73 TEXAS Atlas Farms . . . . . 73 B&C Cattle Co 73 Bar J Bar Hereford Ranch 73 Barber Ranch 73 Case Ranch Herefords 73 Chastain Cattle Co . . . . 73 Dudley Bros 15, 73 G3 Ranch 73 GKB Cattle 73 H2 Ranch and Cattle Co 73 Indian Mound Ranch . . . . 73 Metch Polled Herefords 73 Noack Hereford Ranch 73 Nolan Herefords 73 Powell, James L . . . 20, 73 Redbird Ranch . . . . . 73 Rockin’ W Polled Herefords 73 Rocking Chair Ranch 73 Skrivanek Ranches 73 South Texas Hereford Assn . . 55
AUGUST 5 Georgia Hereford Assn. Herefords in the Cove Sale, Chickamauga 6 Indiana State Fair Jr. Show, Indianapolis 7-9 Texas A&M Beef Cattle Short Course, College Station 8 Wisconsin State Fair Jr. Show, Milwaukee 10 Illinois State Fair Jr. Show, Springfield 12 Illinois State Fair Open Show, Springfield 12 Montgomery County Agricultural Fair, Gaithersburg, Md. 12 West Virginia State Fair Jr. Show, Lewisburg 12 Wisconsin State Fair Open Show, Milwaukee 13 Missouri State Fair Open Show, Sedalia 17 Iowa State Fair Open Show, Des Moines 17 Upper Peninsula State Fair Open Show, Escanaba, Mich. 17 Wyoming State Fair Open Show, Douglas 18 Tennessee State Fair Jr. Show, Lebanon 19 Tennessee State Fair Open Show, Lebanon 19 West Virginia State Open Show, Lewisburg 19 Western Idaho State Fair Open Show, Boise 23 Appalachian Fair Open Show, Gray, Tenn. 25 Ad deadline for October Hereford World 25 Kentucky State Fair Open Show, Louisville 25 New York State Fair Open Show, Syracuse 26 East Tennessee Polled Hereford Assn. Sale, White Pine 26-27 Illinois Hereford Tour 26-27 Iowa Hereford Breeders Annual Tour, NW Region 26-27 Kansas Hereford Tour, SE Region 26 Maryland State Fair Jr. Show, Timonium 26 Missouri Breeders Annual Tour, Central Region 26 Oregon State Fair Open Show, Salem 27 Maryland State Fair Open Show, Timonium 30 South Dakota State Fair Open Show, Huron 31 Nebraska State Fair Open Show, Grand Island SEPTEMBER 1 West Texas Fair & Rodeo Open Show, Abilene 2 Boyd Beef Cattle Breeders Cup Sale, Mays Lick, Ky. 2 Minnesota State Fair Open Show, St. Paul 3 DuQuoin State Fair Open Show, DuQuoin, Ill. 4 East Side Farm & Guests Production Sale, Frederick, Md. 4 Walker Herefords Foundations for the Future, Morrison, Tenn. 9 Kolt Cattle Co. Simple Choices Fall Production Sale, Garland, Neb. 9 Lorenzen Farms Striving for Integrity Production Sale, Chrisman, Ill. 9 Tennessee State Jr. Show, Nashville 10 Tennessee State Open Show, Nashville 11 Genoa Livestock Bull & Female Sale, Minden, Nev. 11 New Mexico State Fair Open Show, Albuquerque 12-13 Montana Hereford Assn. Tour, SW Region 12 Utah State Fair Open Show, Salt Lake City 14 Holden Herefords Miss Advance Female Pageant Sale, Valier, Mont. 15 Churchill Cattle Co. World Class Female Sale, Manhattan, Mont. 15 Kansas State Fair Open Show, Hutchinson 15 Tennessee Valley Fair Open Show, Knoxville 16 Burns Farms & Friends Female Sale, Pikeville, Tenn. 16 Central Missouri Polled Hereford Breeders Assn. Fall Sale, Cuba 16 Ehlke Herefords Montana Made Production Sale, Townsend 16 Hereford Fall Classic Sale, Taylorville, Ill. 16 Northeast Elite Hereford Sale, Ghent, N.Y. 17 Lowderman Cattle Co. Illini Top Cut Sale, Macomb, Ill. 17 Medonte
Calendar of Events
Still River Ranch . . . . . 74 Sunny Hill Ranch 74 Texas Hereford Assn 74 Williams Family Herefords 74 Willis Polled Herefords . . . 74 UTAH Cache Cattle 74 Circle BJ Polled Hereford Ranch 74 JB Herefords . . . . . . 74 Johansen Herefords 74 Rees Bros 74 VIRGINIA Deer Track Farm . . . . . 80 Hereford Hollow Farm 64 Knoll Crest Farm 80 Thistle Tree Farm 74 WASHINGTON CX Ranch 74 Diamond M Ranch 74 Ottley Herefords 74 WEST VIRGINIA Cottage Hill Farm 76 Cottle Brothers Farm 76 Grandview Hereford Farm . . 76 Grassy Run Farms 76 Haught Farms 80 Knotts Polled Herefords 76 Law & Sons, David . . . . 76 Litton Livestock 76 McDonald Polled Herefords 76 Westfall Polled Herefords 74, 76 WISCONSIN Bacon Branch Beef 56 Boettcher’s Brookview Acres 57 C&L Hereford Ranch 57 Four Leaf Cattle 57 H&H Cattle Farm . . . 56 Huth Polled Herefords 56 Larson Hereford Farms 56 Lietzau Hereford Farm 57 MGM Polled Herefords 57, 61 Narrows Creek Farm . . . 57 Next Generation Genetics 56, 61 Oleson Family Farm 57 Otter Creek Polled Herefords 56 Pierce’s Hereford Haven 57 Plum River Ranch . . . 56 Sandrock Ranch Herefords 74 Spaeth Farms 56 Starck Century Farm . . . . . 56 Starr Polled Herefords 57 Whiskey Run Farms 57 Windy Hills Herefords 56 WYOMING Berry’s, The 74 Largent and Sons 74 McClun’s Lazy JM Ranch 74 Micheli Herefords . . . . . . 74 NJW Polled Herefords 74 Ochsner-Roth Cattle Co 74 Wilhelm Cattle 75 CANADA Elmlodge Polled Herefords 41, 75 Medonte Highlands Polled Herefords 36, 75 River Valley Polled Herefords 24 SERVICES 701X 10 Bessler Inc , James F 75 BioZyme Inc 32 Birdwell, Joel . . . . . . . 75 Bock, Aaron 75 Booker, C D 75 Burks, Eddie 75 Carper, Thomas 75 Cattle Max 53 Circle H Headquarters LLC 75 Conover, Al . . . . . 75 Drees, Eric 75 Emmons Ultrasounding 75 Jensen Livestock Agency 75 Lathrop Livestock Transportation 75 Layton, Dustin N . . . . . 75 Lowderman, Cody 75 Lowderman, Monte 75 MCS Auction Inc 75 Merck Animal Health 51, 52 Neogen Corp . . . . . 28 Sale Day 11 Schacher Auction Services 75 Select Sires 16 Sims Plus LLC 75 Stith, Dale . . . . . . . 76 Stout, Justin B 76 Sullivan Supply 60 T Bar C Cattle Co Ltd 76 Wendt, Kevin . . . . 76 Hereford.org/Marketing/Hereford-Sales/Calendar/ View the up-to-date calendar of upcoming seedstock and commercial cattle sales and events in your area Hereford.org August 2023 | 79

EAST SIDE FARM

George, Tammy, William and Andy Ward

3404 Shady Grove Rd. Providence, NC 27315 336-388-2177

Cell 434-251-3637 gwwardjr@centurylink.net

Bob Schaffer, Owner-manager 3320 Deer Track Rd. Spotsylvania, VA 22551 540-582-9234 bob@deertrackfarm.com www.deertrackfarm.com

The Baldwins 2 Church View Rd. Millersville, MD 21108

Bill 443-871-0573 Tara 443-871-0520 Lindsey 443-306-3218 webald@aol.com

Bob and Pam Rhyne 3700 Peach Orchard Rd. Charlotte, NC 28215 Bob’s cell 704-614-0826

Kim, Alexis and Courtney Eudy 10945 Hickory Ridge Rd. Harrisburg, NC 28075 Kim’s cell 704-589-7775

FOUNTAIN VALLEY FARM

The Bachtel Family Westminster, MD Randy 443-340-4418

rbachtel@bprsurveying.com

Brooks 443-340-4419 brobachtel@hotmail.com

Jay and Shelly Stull 10718-A Liberty Rd. Frederick, MD 21701 301-898-8552

eastsidehereford@comcast.net Visitors welcome!

248 River Bend Ln. Smithville, WV 26178

Derek Haught 304 – 477–3818 — Home 304 –299 –9170 — Cell

Annual Bull Sale: Feb. 19, 2024

KNOLL CREST FARM

“Serving the beef industry since 1944” P.O. Box 117 Red House, VA 23963

Office 434-376-3567

Paul S. Bennett 434-941-8245

Jim G. Bennett 434-664-7935

Brian R Bennett 434-664-8309

Dalton G. Bennett 434-664-7946

Scott R. Bennett 434-660-7268

knollcrest@knollcrestfarm.com

Slaytons’ Hereford and Angus Performance Seedstock

J. Paul and Bette Slayton 2272 Dibert Rd. Bedford, PA 15522 814-623-0772

717-805-1376 – cell paul@slaytonsbeardance.com

Dan Snyder cell 240-447-4600 Seth Snyder cell 240-405-6049 Farm 717-642-9199 herefordcattle@stoneridgemanor.com www.stoneridgemanor.com STONE RIDGE MANOR 654 Cold Springs Rd. Gettysburg, PA 17325 Innisfail 723 U208 4010 ET • Embryos and progeny out of this full sister to 4013 sell in this year’s Breeders Classic! CE BW WW YW DMI SC SCF MM M&G MCE 6.3 2.3 67 104 0.4 1.8 19.8 22 56 5.0 MCW UDDR TEAT CW FAT REA MARB BMI$ BII$ CHB$ 76 1.501.30 61 0.051 0.29 0.92 432572 178 KCF Bennett Impact H622 • Impact service and progeny sell at this year’s Breeder Classic! • 11 EPDs in the top 10% or better. CE BW WW YW DMI SC SCF MM M&G MCE 1.9 3.3 71 122 0.9 1.9 18.7 34 70 2.3 MCW UDDR TEAT CW FAT REA MARB BMI$ BII$ CHB$ 106 1.301.20 108 0.031 0.82 0.59452571 207 Selling the Future – One Hereford at a Time SATURDAY OCT. 7, 2023
the 27th Anniversary
Celebrating
Registered Polled Herefords
AVAILABLE! This space is Contact TOMMY COLEY
or tcoley@hereford.org
815-988-7051
80 | August 2023 Hereford.org
FSL PERFECT LADY 84F 20G 27L P44443546 • Sire: BG LCC 11B PERFECTO 84F CE BW WW YW DMI SC SCF MM M&G MCE 11.9 -0.3 61 94 0.60.7 21.7 3565 8.1 MCW UDDR TEAT CW FAT REA MARB BMI$ BII$ CHB$ 82 1.501.50 74 0.051 0.72 -0.03 423 494 101 27L FSL MAIDEN 4013 21B 44J P44237113 • Sire: INNISFAIL WHR X651/723 4013 ET CE BW WW YW DMI SC SCF MM M&G MCE 1.5 3.1 66 107 0.2 1.5 19.0 25 58 1.3 MCW UDDR TEAT CW FAT REA MARB BMI$ BII$ CHB$ 121 1.40 1.30 64 0.031 0.47 0.37 411 512 140 44J FSL MISS LOUISE 84F 3H 16L P44443563 • Sire: BG LCC 11B PERFECTO 84F CE BW WW YW DMI SC SCF MM M&G MCE 5.8 2.1 66 104 0.80.720.5 34 67 4.3 MCW UDDR TEAT CW FAT REA MARB BMI$ BII$ CHB$ 92 1.501.50 74 0.071 0.730.01 404 482 98 16L FSL MISS HOMELAND C34 38A 53G P44015444 • Sire: KCF BENNETT HOMELAND C34 CE BW WW YW DMI SC SCF MM M&G MCE 5.7 2.5 56 91 0.6 1.2 27.1 28 57 3.8 MCW UDDR TEAT CW FAT REA MARB BMI$ BII$ CHB$ 97 1.60 1.70 73 0.0110.59 0.03 504 578 107 53G FSL MAIDEN 4013 53G 39L P44439643 • Sire: INNISFAIL WHR X651/723 4013 ET CE BW WW YW DMI SC SCF MM M&G MCE 1.8 4.1 71 113 0.5 1.5 24.2 26 61 1.2 MCW UDDR TEAT CW FAT REA MARB BMI$ BII$ CHB$ 98 1.501.50 79 0.051 0.500.36 489599 149 39L FSL MISS HOMELAND C34 50Z 60G P44016038 • Sire: KCF BENNETT HOMELAND C34 CE BW WW YW DMI SC SCF MM M&G MCE 1.7 4.264 97 0.7 1.3 24.1 31 62 2.9 MCW UDDR TEAT CW FAT REA MARB BMI$ BII$ CHB$ 92 1.40 1.60 68 0.051 0.530.08 453 536 98 60G FLAT STONE LICK IS GOING TO THE “BREEDERS CUP” SALE AT BOYD BEEF CATTLE, MAYS LICK, KY. • SATURDAY, SEPT. 2, 2023 SELLING 11 PAIRS WITH HEIFER CALVES SIRED BY: INNISFAIL WHR X651/723 4013 ET AND BG LCC PERFECTO 84F All cows selling are bred AI to NJW LONG HAUL 36E, INNISFAIL WHR X651/723 4013 ET AND SHF HOUSTON D287 H086. FLAT STONE LICK FSL Les and Nancy Midla & Family 34 Cranberry Marsh, Marianna, PA 15345 724-267-3325 • flatstonelick@gmail.com Documented cattle that are right for today's industry. Sale book mailed with August Hereford World Dale Stith, Auctioneer/Sale Manager 918-760-1550
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