Cattle Innovation Station - Beef Cattle Business Profitability

What's Hurting Herd Reproduction? Genetics, Nutrition or Vigor

39 min · 20 jun 2026
aflevering What's Hurting Herd Reproduction? Genetics, Nutrition or Vigor artwork

Beschrijving

WHY YOUR COWS MAY BE OPEN — AND THE PREGNANCY TOOLS, MANAGEMENT PRACTICES, GENETICS, AND HYBRID VIGOR STRATEGIES THAT FIX IT. Open cows are the single biggest profit drain in any cow-calf operation. But most producers don't know whether the problem is management, genetics, or something they haven't considered. In this episode of the Cattle Innovation Station podcast, Baxter Whitworth continues his conversation with Dr. Joe Mask, professor of reproductive physiology and animal breeding at Stephen F. Austin State University, to tackle exactly that question. Dr. Mask breaks down the three pregnancy checking methods every producer should know — rectal palpation, ultrasound, and blood testing — and explains why early detection at 30 days changes the management decisions available to you. You'll also learn when estrus detection patches are worth the investment and when they're a waste of money, how poor nutrition destroys reproductive potential faster than any genetic problem, and why hybrid vigor may be the most underutilized profit tool in the commercial cow-calf herd. If your herd's conception rates aren't where they need to be, this episode gives you a systematic way to figure out why — and what to fix first. Topics covered: cattle reproductive efficiency, pregnancy checking cattle, beef cattle ultrasound, blood testing cattle, estrus detection, estrus patches, cattle herd management, body condition score, bull management, breeding soundness exam, beef cattle genetics, genomics and EPDs, hybrid vigor in cattle, heterosis, cow-calf profitability, open cows, Cattle Innovation Station. ---------------------------------------- What are the best pregnancy checking methods for cattle? The three main methods are rectal palpation, ultrasound, and blood testing. Ultrasound allows detection as early as 30 days and can determine fetal sex. Blood testing provides reliable results chuteside in about 20 minutes without specialized equipment. Rectal palpation remains cost-effective and widely used. The best choice depends on your facilities, budget, and how early you need results. When should I use estrus detection patches on my cattle? Estrus patches are most useful when you're running an AI program based on observed estrus rather than timed AI, and when you can't watch cows around the clock. If you're using a strict timed AI protocol, patches add cost without meaningful benefit. For natural service, they can help confirm breeding activity but are optional depending on your management style. How does nutrition affect reproductive efficiency in cattle? Nutrition is the primary management driver of reproductive efficiency. Cows need to maintain a body condition score of 5 to 6 to re-breed within 45 to 60 days postpartum. Cows that drop below a 4 BCS will struggle to cycle back. Hay quality varies significantly — testing your hay and understanding protein content is essential to managing supplementation costs and keeping cows in breeding condition. How heritable is reproductive efficiency in cattle? Reproductive efficiency has lower heritability than traits like growth or carcass quality, which means management has a larger immediate impact than genetics. However, selecting for fertility traits — heifer pregnancy rate, stayability, scrotal circumference in bulls — creates cumulative genetic improvement over generations. Genomically enhanced EPDs help identify these traits earlier in young bulls. What is hybrid vigor and how does it improve cattle reproductive efficiency? Hybrid vigor, or heterosis, occurs when crossbred cattle outperform the average of their parent breeds in traits like fertility, longevity, and calf survivability. F1 crosses — particularly Bos indicus crossed on Bos taurus — show the strongest heterosis. Even within-breed outcrossing using genetically distant bulls can generate meaningful hybrid vigor in a commercial herd.

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41 afleveringen

aflevering What's Hurting Herd Reproduction? Genetics, Nutrition or Vigor artwork

What's Hurting Herd Reproduction? Genetics, Nutrition or Vigor

WHY YOUR COWS MAY BE OPEN — AND THE PREGNANCY TOOLS, MANAGEMENT PRACTICES, GENETICS, AND HYBRID VIGOR STRATEGIES THAT FIX IT. Open cows are the single biggest profit drain in any cow-calf operation. But most producers don't know whether the problem is management, genetics, or something they haven't considered. In this episode of the Cattle Innovation Station podcast, Baxter Whitworth continues his conversation with Dr. Joe Mask, professor of reproductive physiology and animal breeding at Stephen F. Austin State University, to tackle exactly that question. Dr. Mask breaks down the three pregnancy checking methods every producer should know — rectal palpation, ultrasound, and blood testing — and explains why early detection at 30 days changes the management decisions available to you. You'll also learn when estrus detection patches are worth the investment and when they're a waste of money, how poor nutrition destroys reproductive potential faster than any genetic problem, and why hybrid vigor may be the most underutilized profit tool in the commercial cow-calf herd. If your herd's conception rates aren't where they need to be, this episode gives you a systematic way to figure out why — and what to fix first. Topics covered: cattle reproductive efficiency, pregnancy checking cattle, beef cattle ultrasound, blood testing cattle, estrus detection, estrus patches, cattle herd management, body condition score, bull management, breeding soundness exam, beef cattle genetics, genomics and EPDs, hybrid vigor in cattle, heterosis, cow-calf profitability, open cows, Cattle Innovation Station. ---------------------------------------- What are the best pregnancy checking methods for cattle? The three main methods are rectal palpation, ultrasound, and blood testing. Ultrasound allows detection as early as 30 days and can determine fetal sex. Blood testing provides reliable results chuteside in about 20 minutes without specialized equipment. Rectal palpation remains cost-effective and widely used. The best choice depends on your facilities, budget, and how early you need results. When should I use estrus detection patches on my cattle? Estrus patches are most useful when you're running an AI program based on observed estrus rather than timed AI, and when you can't watch cows around the clock. If you're using a strict timed AI protocol, patches add cost without meaningful benefit. For natural service, they can help confirm breeding activity but are optional depending on your management style. How does nutrition affect reproductive efficiency in cattle? Nutrition is the primary management driver of reproductive efficiency. Cows need to maintain a body condition score of 5 to 6 to re-breed within 45 to 60 days postpartum. Cows that drop below a 4 BCS will struggle to cycle back. Hay quality varies significantly — testing your hay and understanding protein content is essential to managing supplementation costs and keeping cows in breeding condition. How heritable is reproductive efficiency in cattle? Reproductive efficiency has lower heritability than traits like growth or carcass quality, which means management has a larger immediate impact than genetics. However, selecting for fertility traits — heifer pregnancy rate, stayability, scrotal circumference in bulls — creates cumulative genetic improvement over generations. Genomically enhanced EPDs help identify these traits earlier in young bulls. What is hybrid vigor and how does it improve cattle reproductive efficiency? Hybrid vigor, or heterosis, occurs when crossbred cattle outperform the average of their parent breeds in traits like fertility, longevity, and calf survivability. F1 crosses — particularly Bos indicus crossed on Bos taurus — show the strongest heterosis. Even within-breed outcrossing using genetically distant bulls can generate meaningful hybrid vigor in a commercial herd.

20 jun 202639 min
aflevering Artificial Insemination, ET & IVF: Which Fits Your Herd? artwork

Artificial Insemination, ET & IVF: Which Fits Your Herd?

Accelerate Your Cattle Herds Production: Use Tools Correctly How to utilize Embryo Transfer, IVF, AI, and Natural Service to benefit your cattle herd. Have you ever wanted to grow your cattle herd exponentially fast while still have high-quality genetics. Actually, growing your cattle herd's quality and quantity are mutually beneficial. This episode of the Cattle Innovation Station podcast host guest Dr. Joe Madk. dives into the power using Reproductive tools to grow both you herd's quantity of superior genetic cattle. In this episode: How to utilize Embryo Transfer, IVF, AI, and Natural Service to benefit your cattle herd. Resources & Links: Cattle Innovation Station Podcast Follow us on the streaming platform of your choice, share this episode, and follow us on Facebook, Instagram.

10 jun 202637 min
aflevering Are Cattle Buyback Programs the Key to Higher Premiums? artwork

Are Cattle Buyback Programs the Key to Higher Premiums?

How cow-calf producers can secure premiums, reduce marketing time, and stay free from restrictive contracts. Discover how cattle buyback programs help cow-calf producers earn premiums, reduce marketing hassle, and keep full control — no binding contracts. Featuring Jojo Corrales of HeartBrand Beef. Most cow-calf producers sell at the sale barn or market cattle themselves — and both come with real risks. Volatile prices. Time lost. No visibility into how your cattle actually perform on the rail. Cattle buyback programs offer a third option. In this episode, Baxter Whitworth sits down with Jojo Corrales, Vice President of Cattle Operations at HeartBrand Beef, to break down exactly how these programs work, how they benefit your operation, and how to join one without signing away your freedom to sell where you choose. You'll learn what a cattle buyback program actually is, how beef alliances help smaller cow-calf producers compete for premiums, why no-contract programs protect your operation from the kind of vertical integration that hurt the poultry industry, and how EID tags and DNA verification create data that improves your herd long-term. If you're a cow-calf producer — commercial or seedstock — looking to add a reliable, premium-paying market channel to your cattle business, this episode is for you. New episodes monthly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and iHeart Radio. Topics covered: cattle buyback programs, beef alliances, branded beef, cow-calf producer marketing, EID tags, DNA verification, cattle premiums, beef cattle genetics, cattle cash flow, profitable cattle ranching, cattle business, and Cattle Innovation Station. ---------------------------------------- What is a cattle buyback program? A cattle buyback program is an arrangement where a seedstock operation or branded beef company purchases calves back from producers who used their genetics, typically at a premium price above the commodity market — with no contract forcing you to sell. How do cattle buyback programs benefit cow-calf producers? They provide a guaranteed premium buyer for your calves, reduce the time and uncertainty of marketing cattle yourself, and give you access to carcass data when you retain ownership through harvest. Are cattle buyback programs the same as poultry vertical integration? No. A legitimate cattle buyback program gives you the option to sell back — not the obligation. There is no contract binding you to that buyer. If another market pays better, you can sell there instead. That free-market competition is what keeps the premium high. How do I join a beef alliance? Buy genetics from a program that offers a buyback, meet their requirements — typically DNA verification, weight specs, and sometimes no hormone implants — then notify them when your calves are ready. For smaller producers, forming a beef alliance with neighboring ranchers increases your marketing power as a group. What are EID tags and why do they matter in a buyback program? Electronic ID tags allow you to track your cattle from your operation through harvest and retrieve individual carcass data. This improves future breeding decisions and is often required by buyback programs for traceability. In Texas, EID tags may be available free through the Texas Department of Agriculture.

1 jun 202627 min
aflevering Are You Leaving Money on the Table in Your Cattle Business? artwork

Are You Leaving Money on the Table in Your Cattle Business?

How cow-calf producers can use vertical integration principles to capture more value from their own cattle — with Jojo Corrales of HeartBrand Beef. Most cow-calf producers sell at weaning and walk away. But the genetics you invested in are worth far more down the supply chain — and without a strategy for retaining that value, you never see it. In this episode of the Cattle Innovation Station podcast, Baxter Whitworth sits down with Jojo Corrales, Vice President of Cattle Operations at HeartBrand Beef, to break down how cow-calf producers can begin capturing more of what their cattle are actually worth. You'll learn why selling beef direct is harder than it looks and how to build a market that can move a whole carcass profitably, how HeartBrand uses individual carcass data from over 250,000 head to drive better breeding decisions, why retaining ownership through a buyback program or feedlot partnership is the only way to capture the full value of premium genetics, and why mastering your cow-calf operation has to come before integrating into other sectors. If you're a cow-calf producer wondering whether there's more money to be made beyond the sale barn, this episode gives you an honest look at what it actually takes. New episodes monthly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and iHeart Radio. Topics covered: vertical integration cattle, retaining cattle ownership, direct beef sales, cattle carcass data, cow-calf profitability, cattle genetics selection, beef cattle market versatility, source verified beef, cattle business strategy, HeartBrand Beef, Akaushi cattle, cattle industry cash flow, Cattle Innovation Station. What is vertical integration in the cattle industry? Vertical integration in cattle means owning or controlling multiple stages of production — from cow-calf through feedlot, harvest, and beef sales. Most cattle operations are highly segregated, meaning producers rarely capture value beyond the stage they operate in. Selective vertical integration allows cow-calf producers to capture premiums they currently leave on the table. How can a small cow-calf producer start selling beef direct? Start small — two to three head per week — and build your customer base before scaling. The real challenge isn't selling premium cuts like ribeyes and filets. It's moving the 400 pounds of ground beef per carcass at a profitable price. Build relationships with restaurants, butcher shops, and farmers market customers who can absorb different cuts before expanding your harvest numbers. How does carcass data improve cattle genetics decisions? When producers retain ownership through harvest they receive individual carcass data — marbling scores, yield grades, efficiency, and health records — traceable back to specific sires and dams. Over time this reveals which matings produce the most profitable cattle, allowing more precise breeding decisions than EPDs alone provide. Should I start selling direct beef or focus on my cow-calf operation first? Master your cow-calf operation first. As Jojo Corrales puts it — get good at cow-calf, then integrate. Adding direct beef sales or feedlot retention before you've mastered production adds complexity and financial risk on top of an already challenging business. Ask yourself honestly: do you like selling and talking to customers, or do you prefer raising cattle and collecting a check? Your answer should shape your integration strategy.

20 mei 202643 min
aflevering Vertical Integration: The Cattle Business Dirty Word? artwork

Vertical Integration: The Cattle Business Dirty Word?

The word vertical integration makes most cow-calf producers uncomfortable — and for good reason. But what if used correctly it could actually make your operation more profitable? In this episode of the Cattle Innovation Station podcast, Baxter Whitworth sits down with Jojo Corrales, Vice President of Cattle Operations at HeartBrand Beef, to break down why vertical integration gets a bad reputation in the cattle industry, where that reputation is deserved, and where cow-calf producers are leaving real money on the table by ignoring it entirely. You'll learn why the cattle industry is the most segregated animal protein sector and what that costs you, how HeartBrand uses a no-contract buyback program to create market versatility for cow-calf producers without controlling their operation, why retaining ownership and knowing your cattle's carcass performance gives you a major pricing advantage, and how to decide whether feeding out your own cattle or selling at weaning is actually the better financial decision for your operation right now. This is not a case for handing your operation over to a packer. It's a case for understanding every option available to you — and using that knowledge to get paid more for the cattle you're already raising. New episodes monthly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and iHeart Radio. Topics covered: vertical integration cattle, cow-calf profitability, cattle buyback program, retaining cattle ownership, HeartBrand Beef, Akaushi cattle, beef cattle market, cattle carcass data, cattle business strategy, cattle industry cash flow, market versatility cattle, Cattle Innovation Station. ---------------------------------------- What is vertical integration in the cattle industry? Vertical integration means owning or controlling multiple sectors of production from genetics through cow-calf, feedlot, harvest, and retail beef sales. In cattle it is far less common than in poultry or pork because of the capital, land, and time required. Most producers only operate in one sector and rarely capture value from the others. Is vertical integration bad for cow-calf producers? Not always. The negative reputation comes from contract-based systems like poultry where producers are locked in and lose pricing power. A no-contract buyback program like HeartBrand Beef offers the opposite — a premium buyer option with no obligation to sell. That distinction is critical. What is retaining ownership in cattle and is it worth it? Retaining ownership means keeping your cattle through the feedlot and harvest rather than selling at weaning or as yearlings. It gives you carcass data, feed efficiency data, and the potential for significantly higher returns — but requires more capital and time. Whether it is worth it depends on your genetics, location, feed costs, and cash flow needs. How do cow-calf producers benefit from knowing their cattle's carcass data? Carcass data tied back to specific sires and dams reveals which genetics are actually producing profitable cattle versus which look good on paper. This information drives better bull selection decisions and can change what you breed for entirely. vertical integration cattle, cow-calf profitability, cattle buyback program, retaining cattle ownership, cattle carcass data, beef cattle market versatility, cattle business strategy, Vertical integration gets a bad rap — but could it make your cattle operation more profitable? Jojo Corrales of HeartBrand Beef breaks down the real opportunity. 00:00 — Is Vertical Integration Really That Bad for Cattle Producers? 01:00 — Introduction: Jojo Corrales and HeartBrand Beef 02:30 — What Is Vertical Integration in the Cattle Industry? 04:15 — Why Cattle Is the Most Segregated Animal Protein Sector 07:55 — The Challenges of Selling Beef Direct and Moving a Whole Carcass 10:30 — Why Packers Pay More When Cattle Supply Is Tight 13:30

8 mei 202632 min