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News Desk

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Give beef heifers a good start to a long, productive life

FORT WORTH, Texas, Feb. 22, 2008—Setting your beef heifers up for a long, successful life in your herd starts before weaning, says Dr. Gary Williams, Texas AgriLife Research, Beeville. Williams will lead the discussion on managing and developing heifers at the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association 14th School for Successful Ranching, Mar. 14-15 at the American Bank Center in Corpus Christi.

"We can maximize lifetime productivity of females if they are developed right," says Williams.

Fine-tuning health programs and getting them started with solid nutrition will put producers on the right track.

"Heifers must be placed on an appropriate nutritional program after weaning … to assure that they have adequate opportunity to reach sexual maturity within a specified time period, usually between 12 and 15 months of age, depending upon breed type," Williams says.

A good herd health program will include early-calfhood vaccinations, booster shots and properly timed deworming.

"At our location, a sound immunization program, including a booster to their early-calfhood blackleg vaccination, a broad spectrum respiratory virus vaccine (IBR/PI3/BVD and BRSV) and lepto/vibrio are administered two to three weeks before weaning or at purchase. Heifers then receive boosters at weaning with the respiratory vaccine, lepto and vibrio."

Williams continues, "Heifers are dewormed at this time and dewormed again 30 days later, because I want them to have the best opportunity to utilize the feed and forages."

Weight at puberty varies with breed type, Williams explains. "In the Gulf Coast region, most cattle have some Bos indicus influence and will be later maturing compared to straight English-bred heifers. The typical F-1 Braford will reach puberty at 725 to 750 pounds. If they gain about one and a half pounds per day from weaning until targeted breeding, the majority will be pubertal at the desired time," he explains.

Keeping heifers on track without coming in above or below the magic number will give these animals the best chance.

"Cattlemen are trying to upgrade their herds and improve genetic worth with these females," Williams says. "It is important to develop them right and select for fertility to get maximum lifetime production. Reproduction is at the top of the list when it comes to profit indicators, but breeders have to select replacements for what they want as a brood cow."

This year marks TSCRA's 14th annual School for Successful Ranching, a two-day program featuring three educational tracks—animal management, the business of ranching and range management. TSCRA has brought in experts from the Texas AgriLife Extension Service, King Ranch Institute for Ranch Management, Welder Wildlife Foundation, NRCS and Oklahoma State University to lead the sessions.

 Registration is $60 for TSCRA members or $100 for nonmembers and includes two hot meals and free admittance to the TSCRA Trade Show, featuring more than 150 exhibitors. Space is limited, so pre-registration is encouraged. For additional details including a complete schedule, or to register, visit www.texascattleraisers.org.

The School for Successful Ranching is held in conjunction with the 2008 TSCRA Annual Convention and Trade Show, Brand the Future.

Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers Association is a 131-year-old trade organization whose 15,000 members manage approximately 3.7 million cattle on 96.5 million acres of range and pasture land, primarily in Texas and Oklahoma. TSCRA provides law enforcement services, livestock inspection, legislative and regulatory advocacy and education opportunities for its members.

TSCRA–09–2008

 

 

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