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The Rural Voice, 1992-05, Page 44Travel Beef is big-time in Nebraska, Bruce beef producers find out If you are a cattle feeder, did you ever consider how wonderful it would be to know before there were any visible symptoms, that some of your animals were about to need medical treatment and to be able to pick out which animals in the large herd actually needed treatment? That's just one of the many pieces of information 47 people from Grey/Bruce (mainly) brought back from Nebraska in late February. I'd better explain that in the large custom feed yards we visited, the feed is carefully weighed each time and if there is any left over, mana- gers look at a possible onset of ill- ness as one of the possible reasons for the lack of appetite of the animal. As soon as all other possibilities have been eliminated, the pen check- ers may herd the whole lot down the central alleyways to the treatment area. Experience has shown them that it is more than likely the last animals to reach this area are the ones that most likely need medical attention. The Grey -Bruce cattlemen's tour started off with a handful from Owen Sound on Sunday, February 23. By the last pick-up at Exeter, all seats were filled. We ate a prepared meal on the bus and reached our first destination—a motel near the Detroit airport for an overnight stay. We flew out of Detroit next morning on United Airlines to Chicago, where we changed planes for Lincoln Nebraska. From there we travelled by a rather luxurious bus. The first yard we visited was at Kearney. All the feedyards visited were much the same— central feed mixing and storage area, loading By Roger Lamont chutes, handling facilities and pens of cattle with attending cowboys on horseback. There is no shelter of any kind, only rounded mounds of dirt in each pen of 100-200 animals. The weather in the area was mild and had been for most of the winter. All the yard managers complained about ex- cessive rain which caused wet condi- tions making messy pens with a mixture of manure and mud "shud". One of the Nebraska practices which elicited the most comments was that of marketing the whole pen of 100- 200 head at the same time, without sorting. The rationale behind this practice is that cattle near market weight will go "off feed" if disturbed by departures or new arrivals to their social order. In reply to questions on grading factors, we were told that 75 per cent of the animals would grade choice, 12 per cent would be over -fat and 12 per cent would be under - finished. In reviewing some of the literature we received, we noticed the problem with excess fat costs the beef industry in the U.S. $128 U.S. per head. More than two million pounds of fat are produced by U.S. beef packers per day. It would seem there could be a cause and effect situation due to the lack of sorting and over -fat animals, which was noted as the No. 1 beef - buyer concern. During the stay, the Ontario farmers learned some interesting facts during seminars they attended. They learned that cattle hides, which bring virtually nothing in Ontario, are worth $75 in the U.S. Pregnant heifers are supposed to cause losses to Ontario packers (and discounts to Ontario farmers) but in the U.S. packers sell the fetuses for medical research and receive up to $400. The fact Nebraska sits on top of the Ogallala aquifer means that water is plentiful for irrigation, bringing five cuts of alfalfa a year and 200 bu./acre corn, making it difficult for an Ontario feedlot to compete. Could it be the future of beef in Grey county will be in the herds of the cow -calf producer with land and climate suitable for pasture production with the calves sent to the U.S. for finishing? Already some Grey -Bruce cattle are being fattened in the U.S. We asked several times about subsidies. Amnesia seemed to set in. One person did mention the floor price for corn but said that had noth- ing to do with the cattle industry. From an Ag Canada study for 1989 I learned that subsidies to the cattle industry in California, Iowa, Kansas, New York, North Dakota, Texas and Wisconsin totalled $766 million fed- erally and $1.306 billion from state treasuries so you can figure out the average of these and calculate what must be going to Nebraska. I asked about the land set-aside program. One person said in some states you could buy a large holding, set aside 10 per cent, and use those funds to make the mortgage pay- ments on the whole farm. Another farmer said an acquaintance set aside the poorer acreage on his farm and collected $70 per acre per year for 10 years. But of course this shouldn't be called a subsidy. 40 THE RURAL VOICE