Loading...
The Rural Voice, 1981-01, Page 5Bruce dairy farm has excellent production Alan Whytock, seen here with one ul'his top producing cows, is a firm believer in using artificial insemination to upgrade the production figures in his herd. As you approach the Whytock Dairy Farm on the 4th of Culross in Bruce County you cannot help but be impressed by the white painted fence posts which frame the farm and the big, red brick farm house. Alan Whytock and his wife, Dorothy, started milking cows here in 1962. Alan's father had been milking shorthorns, but Alan bought a Holstein at a sale and he soon found out how much better she milked. So they bred the shorthorns for beef (which lowered their milk production) and started to build a herd of Holsteins. Right away they went on the Dairy Herd Improvement (D.H.I.) program and later they entered the National Identification Program (N.1.P.) when it started. From the beginning, Alan and Dorothy decided not to keep a bull on the farm. They were raising a family and all five children were helping in the barn as soon as they were old enough. Also, Alan explained: "You go out and buy a bull to breed all of your cows that one year. Because he is not a 'proven' bull you have no idea if his calves are going to improve your herd. By the time you find out (three or four years later) that his daughters are indeed superior, you have long since shipped him. By using A.1. you can continue to use an individual bull for several years." Alan also figured that he could keep two or three cows in the space that one bull would require. The production from these cows would more tha n offset the cost of A.I. Alan's son, Wayne, had just returned from the Winter Fair the day I visited the Whytock farm and he was enthusiastic about the bulls he had seen there. Wayne told us: "United Breeders bought a bull yesterday for $80,000 and last year they paid S140,000 for a bull shown at the Winter Fair. There are very few dairy farmers who could afford to pay this kind of money for unproven bulls." TEST RATINGS Although these unproven bulls are sired by well proven bulls from dams classified as Excellent or Very Good. United Breeders must encourage test matings for four to six weeks in herds which are on production test. Then the use of these bulls is discouraged until they are proven. In the Holstein breed, 15 to 20 youne bulls with superior genetic promise are sampled each year by United' Breeders Inc. On the average, only four out of 20 bulls will be superior enough, based on daughter information, to return to service five years later. The results of using semen from these superior bulls can be clearly seen in Alan Whytock's production figures. And not all of his cows are registered. Some of his top producers are the result of generations of genetic improvement brought about by using carefully selected bulls in the A.I. Unit. One wall of the Whytock's den is covered with frame certificates and awards from various organizations. One of the awards he received in 1979 was an Outstanding Production Award from the Bruce County Holstein Club for the highest composite BCA (Breed Class Average) for a two-year-old named "Ethel Ace." In 305 days she produced 8643 kg. of milk (BCA 203) and 322 kg. fat (BCA 204). Wayne Whytock proudly showed me the latest award which they haven't had time to frame yet. It was from the Holstein - Friesian Association of Canada for the Highest County Herd Average: BCA for milk (172), BCA for fat (162) and composite BCA (167). According to Don Fortune, director of information and promotion for United Breeders, this places Alan Whytock fourth in Ontario for herd production figures. Further proof of the superiority of this herd can be seen in the Whytock barn where the stalls are occupied with beautiful, black and white cows which clearly demonstrate the classic Holstein conformation. Alan Whytock is very modest about his achievements but his son, Wayne, told me that these cows give them an average of 16,869 lbs. of milk per year --- an impressive record in anybody's book. trend could be in any of the qualities desired such as: good feet and legs, mammary systems, udders, rumps, etc. Some traits are more highly heritable than others. The history of artificial insemination in swine is much more recent. Starting in 1960, Western Ontario Breeders Inc., a leading cattle A.I. Centre, performed research and field trials on swine A.I. Fourteen years later the Ontario Swine A.I. Association was founded. It is the only co-operative Swine A.I. organization operating in Canada, with a license issued by Agriculture Canada. Consider- able assistance from Agriculture Canada, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food, and the Ontario York Producers Marketing Board lets the Association make available to the swine industry a battery of the best performance tested boars in North America. Semen from this A.1. unit is flown to customers all across Canada and overseas. The Association currently has 825 members. The pi occdure for using A.I. on a sow is entirely different from the one followed for cows. For one thing, a technician cannot be used to inseminate a sow because she will probable not go into 'standing' heat with someone strange around her. Therefore, the herd owner or manager must take a one -day course put on by the Ontario Swine A.1. Association so he can learn to inseminate his own sows. He (or she) must learn how to work a sow up in the same manner that a boar does during a natural breeding. This "working up" will encourage a THE RURAL VOICE/JANUARY 1981 PG. 5