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Maximize success through good yearling bull management

Using bulls as yearlings is an excellent way to get an additional year of use from bulls, reducing the per-cow bull depreciation cost.

Kent Barnes, Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service area livestock specialist, said there are several management tips that cattle producers can use to maximize the success of yearling bulls.

“Run yearling bulls only with other yearling bulls on a set of females,”  he said. “Yearlings who run with older bulls may be physically abused to the point that they settle very few cows.”

Reduce the cow-to-bull ratio to about 50 percent of that maintained with older bulls.

“If you run one mature bull to each 30 cows, then 15 cows should be plenty for each yearling bull,”  Barnes said.

Some cattle producers have successfully rotated yearling bulls in and out of the breeding pasture at approximately two-week intervals.

Barnes said the “rest-and-work rotation” requires more management but can be very beneficial.

“Yearlings should be left with the cow herd for 60 days or less,”  he said. “Beyond that time, their body condition will decline, which may have long-range negative effects on their growth.”

Following their removal from the cow herd, yearling bulls should continue to be kept separate from older bulls at least through their second winter. They should be placed on the best available feed and should receive regular supplementation until the next breeding season.

“It´s important to remember that these young bulls are still growing rapidly, in addition to replacing the condition lost in the breeding pasture,”  Barnes said. “Extra care and feed of yearling bulls after the breeding season will result in more attractive mature bulls with a much higher salvage value.”

Published 04/29/2008

Source: Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service

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