Illinois Angus News - January/February 2023

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www.illinoisbeef.com January/February 2023 - Illinois Beef 65

President: David Jenkins Vice President: Carla Jurgenson Secretary: Aaron Schafer Business Manager: Doug Turner Past President: Joel York

Bureau County: John DeRycke

Central Illinois: Luke Lemenager

Illinois Valley: Open

Lamoine Valley: Tracy Rawlings

Logan County : Carla Jurgenson

Northern Illinois: Jarad Carroll

South Central: Richard Hurst

Wabash Valley: Shaye Harre

Ascent Angus

Bill Farm Angus

Callan Farms

Evers Livestock Farm

Kiesewetter Angus

Kramer Angus

Lemenager Cattle

Lorenzen Farms

Panther Creek Ranch

Rhodes Angus

Sunnyhill Angus Farm

Walnut Grove Angus

WP Angus

York Farms

ILLINOIS ANGUS ASSOCIATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS ADVERTISERS INDEX
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72 IN THIS ISSUE: 67 Northern International Livestock Exposition Results 67 American Royal Results 68 North American International Livestock Expo Results 68 Emily Brooks Earns Junior Bronze and Silver Awards 70 Winter Warm-Up Results 71 Keeping Cows Maternal CONTACT To place advertisements or your latest Angus news contact: Olivia Hoots Illinois Beef Editor Illinois Beef Association 2501 N 8th Street Springfield, IL 62702 217-787-4280 olivia@illinoisbeef.com www.illinoisbeef.com UPCOMING EVENTS Visit the Events page at www.illinoisangus.com for a list of upcoming events and Angus sales this spring.
Directors at Large:
ON THE COVER
Beef
by
January/February 2023 *Please remember to join us on Friday, February 24, at 6:00 p.m. at Northfield Inn & Suites for our annual banquet during the Illinois Beef Expo. 66 Illinois Beef - January/February 2023 www.illinoisbeef.com
Grant Bedel TJ Curtin Jim Marsh Bradley Wolter Kyle Buetke Jeff Dameron Chris Cassady Clay Sellmeyer Dan Naughton Greg McClure David Mool Lee Stremsterfer
Photo taken at Illinois
Expo
Betty Haynes

Fall 2022 Show Recap

Northern International Livestock Exposition

Billings, Mont. | October 21

American Royal

Kansas

City, Mo. | October 21-22

Grand Champion Bull Roll of Victory Angus Show

Lazy JB Ego 1428

Owners: Dameron Angus Farm - Lexington, Ill.

Lazy JB Angus,- Montrose, Colo.

Photo: Next Level Images

Show

Exar Princess 2698

Owner: Jack Dameron, Towanda, Ill.

Photo: Next Level Images

Intermediate Champion Heifer

Super Point Roll of Victory Angus Show

Shore Acres SCC Phyllis 129

Owner: Emily Brooks, Prophetstown, Ill.

Photo: Next Level Images

Reserve Champion Junior Heifer Calf Junior Angus
www.illinoisbeef.com January/February 2023 - Illinois Beef 67

North American International Livestock Expo Super Point Roll of Victory Angus Show

Reserve Champion Cow-calf Pair

TLF Northern Miss

Owner: Holly Marsh, Earlville, Ill.

Photo: Linde’s Livestock Images

Reserve Junior Heifer Champion Division 1

PVF Missie 1055

Owner: Ashton Dillow, Villa Ridge, Ill.

Photo: Linde’s Livestock Images

Emily Brooks earns Junior Bronze and Silver Awards

Reserve Junior Heifer Champion Division 2

SCC SFC Phyllis 110

Owner: Addison Bartlow, Monticello, Ill.

Photo: Linde’s Livestock Images

Emily Brooks, Prophetstown, Illinois, has earned the National Junior Angus Association’s (NJAA) Bronze and Silver awards, according to Caitlyn Brandt, events and junior activities director of the American Angus Association® in Saint Joseph, Mo.

Brooks is the 20-year-old daughter of Jeff and Shelley Brooks and attends the University of Illinois, where she studies Agricultural Economics. She is a member of the NJAA and the Illinois Junior Angus Association where she has served as treasurer and royalty.

She has participated in regional and national shows. At the National Junior Angus Show, Brooks participated in the creative writing and team sales contests and the AllAmerican Certified Angus Beef® Cook-Off. She was also a voting delegate in 2022. She participated in the 2017 Leaders Engaged in Angus Development Conference and the 2019 State Training and Angus Retreat conference.

Brooks has consigned cattle in the Stertzbach Cattle Company sale and the Dameron Angus Focus on the Future sale.

The Bronze and Silver awards are the first two levels of the NJAA Recognition Program that began in 1972. Junior Angus breeders must apply for the awards, then meet point requirements in many areas of participation before receiving the honors. Applicants are evaluated in areas of junior Angus association activities and leadership, participation in showmanship, contests and shows, using performance testing to improve their herd and their progress in producing and merchandising Angus cattle.

The NJAA promotes the involvement of young people in raising Angus cattle, while also providing leadership and self-development opportunities for the nearly 4,500 active members nationwide.

Angus. America’s Breed.

Contact Regional Manager Casey Jentz: Cell: 608-234-1998 cjentz@angus.org

Louisville, Ky. | November 14 | Judge: John Rayfield - Wolfforth, Tx.
reliable
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to come by.
to locate
select
needs, and to access
services.
A
business partner
difficult
Contact Casey Jentz
Angus genetics,
marketing options tailored to your
American Angus Association® programs and
Put the business breed to work for you.
American
Casey Jentz, Regional Manager Illinois Indiana Michigan Wisconsin
© 2020-2021
Angus Association 3201 Frederick Ave. | St. Joseph, MO 64506 816.383.5100 | www.ANGUS.org
68 Illinois Beef - January/February 2023 www.illinoisbeef.com
York Farms York Farms 16672 E 1050th Ave. Palestine, IL 62451 Joel: 618.562.2714 Robert: 618.562.2702 www.yorkfarmsangus.com 10th Annual Production Sale • February 11, 2023 • 1 PM at the farm Selling a select group of stout-made, calving ease, 12-18 month old herd sire prospects (*Parentage and Genomic verified along with AHIR Performance Data), productive spring and fall pairs, many with calves at side from some of the most notable cow families in the breed, show heifer and donor prospects. NEWDATE!SALE DATE! Broadcast live on LiveAuctions.tv Brooklyn Graham Auctioneer Jerry Lehman Marketing Agent Adam Swigart (309) 826-3809 York Farms Bloodline 2154 www.illinoisbeef.com January/February 2023 - Illinois Beef 69
Winter Warm-Up Springfield, Ill. | December 10-11 | Judges:
Parker Henley, Dustin Frank
Reserve Champion Heifer Ring B, 4th Overall Ring A Champion Angus Both Rings Paige Lemenager Reserve Champion Angus Heifer Ring A Simon Thoreson Reserve Champion Angus Heifer Ring B Mary Bendlage OPEN HOUSE and BID OFF BULL & FEMALE SALE Saturday February 18, 2023 – 12:30 PM (CT) ANGUS BULLS SELL SIRED BY KG Justified 3023, Raven Powerball 53, Hoover Dam, Sydgen Enhance, and VAR Reserve 1111 SIMANGUS™ BULLS SELL SIRED BY Hook`s Eagle 6E, CCR Cowboy Cut 5048Z, MR NLC Upgrade U8676, Hook`s Beacon 56B, and SF Cowboy H1 ANGUS HEIFERS SELL SIRED BY Rhodes Hoover 7123 and Rhodes Complement 073 SIMANGUS™ HEIFERS SELL SIRED BY Hook`s Eagle 6E, CCR Cowboy Cut 5048Z, MR NLC Upgrade U8676, Hook`s Beacon 56B, and SF Cowboy H1 Hook`s Eagle 6E KG Justified 3023 70 Illinois Beef - January/February 2023 www.illinoisbeef.com
Photos by: Cindy’s Livestock Photography

Keeping Cows Maternal

A cow that can have a calf all on her own has become so commonplace it’s a trait that’s easy to take for granted.

“One of our biggest success stories is calving ease. Obviously tracking calving dystocia events at birth and weighing those calves have allowed Angus to have a lot of success in the calving ease debate,” says Kelli Retallick-Riley, president of Angus Genetics Inc. (AGI®).

But the “maternal” discussion is far more complex than a healthy live birth, she says, and seedstock producers are using more data and knowledge to create better dams each year.

Retallick-Riley joined breeders Chad Denowh, GartnerDenowh Angus, and Joe Lowe, Oak Hollow Angus, on The Angus Conversation podcast to discuss what it takes to have cows that work where they live and work further down the line.

“The cows are kind of the employee,” Lowe says. “They have to show up. It’s our job to take care of the cow. It is the cow’s job to take care of the calf.” He and his father raise Angus seedstock near Smiths Grove, Kentucky, where they use both genomics and phenotype to select for good mothers.

“If they can walk, if they can slick off and they can breed — those are the three non-starters if they don’t in our environment,” he says, noting many of his customers deal with fescue pressure.

Both he and Denowh have been early adopters of programs that help turn data into answers, such as the American Angus Association’s Maternal Plus record keeping system.

“We want the cows to look the part first and foremost, but they also have to have the structure, the leg structure, the udder structure, to hold up and stay in these herds for a long amount of time,” says Denowh, who is the sixth generation on his family’s Sidney, Montana, ranch. “Everybody up in this country culls their open cows, and if they don’t stay in the herd, they don’t make you money.”

His family adopted the Angus Herd Improvement Records (AHIR®) program when it came out in the 1970s, so they have more than 50 years of trends to draw on.

“We work a lot with efficiency and raising a good calf in a timely manner,” Denowh says.

Both cattlemen work at having a calf crop that is in demand, no matter the intended marketing.

“There’s a lot of guys that don’t think you can have maternal and carcass together — sure you can, it just takes longer,” Denowh says.

Sometimes that means not using the top carcass bull if it doesn’t meet certain maternal parameters. He’s seen mature cow weights stay moderate while pushing growth and he’s made improvements in calving ease while also improving marbling.

“I don’t think they’re antagonistic at all, any of the traits. I think you just have to find out which traits are most important to you and have a program and stick to it,” Denowh says.

The best cows are those you hardly notice.

“Everyone says the best cow’s the one you don’t know she’s there until she’s six, and you look down and she’s got two daughters in the herd,” Lowe observes.

Retallick-Riley and her team at AGI continues to use the Association’s database — the largest single beef breed database in the world — to find ways to better characterize maternal genetics. That will allow them to create additional selection tools, such as cow fertility or regionally adapted expected progeny differences (EPDs).

Since calving ease EPDs came out in 2005, the breed has steadily added additional traits that aid in cow herd selection, such as docility, heifer pregnancy, hair shed, foot angle and claw set.

“We’ve been spoiled because we have great members who really take care of their cow herd. They cull hard,” RetallickRiley says. “They really get rid of those problem animals in those problem areas, but we’re here to help them figure out which animals they need to remove from the herd sooner, and that’s really where our genetic tools can come in.”

To listen to the whole conversation on maternal function, subscribe to The Angus Conversation on your favorite podcast platform or visit TheAngusConversation.com.

Breeders explore strategies for cattle that ‘do it all.’
www.illinoisbeef.com January/February 2023 - Illinois Beef 71
LARRY RHODES 217-473-5868 cell 217-854-5200 o ce rhodesangus@royell.org 9350 Rte 108, Carlinville, IL 62626 www.RhodesAngus.com 72 Illinois Beef - January/February 2023 www.illinoisbeef.com

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