Short v Non-short - Short v Non-short
- Broomcroft
- Posts: 3005
- Joined: Wed Sep 06, 2006 4:42 am
- Location: Shropshire, England
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Hi Jem
According to my stats, it varies, but generally a short-leg will produce less meat. But you can have quite big, meaty shorts, and quite tall skinny longs. The bone structure also plays a big part I feel. I have had one short who was like a mammoth, but turned out to be all bone. Others have been great. The best figures I have seen so far are generally from square-built, stocky non-shorts. I just got 230kg deadweight last week from a steer at 24 months that was a stocky long-leg. But they are all good.
I think most people will agree that shorts will finish a little easier on ordinary grass. Quite often the differences in figures can be down to how they were reared and the quality of the grazing, not the type of animal.
The best figures I have ever achieved, by miles was a 26 month old, unworked bull. His figures were stunning and equivalent to a well-reared Limousin (percentage-wise), even though he lived on grass alone. The beef was excellent and very well-marbled, but it also included just a few really tough steaks that would have been better for making shoes if you'd have managed to get the nails through! So we won't be doing a bull again because we well our meat and everyone remembers the bad steak more than they do the good ones. If we were doing it for ourselves, another bull would tempt me.
Edited By Broomcroft on 1225821556
According to my stats, it varies, but generally a short-leg will produce less meat. But you can have quite big, meaty shorts, and quite tall skinny longs. The bone structure also plays a big part I feel. I have had one short who was like a mammoth, but turned out to be all bone. Others have been great. The best figures I have seen so far are generally from square-built, stocky non-shorts. I just got 230kg deadweight last week from a steer at 24 months that was a stocky long-leg. But they are all good.
I think most people will agree that shorts will finish a little easier on ordinary grass. Quite often the differences in figures can be down to how they were reared and the quality of the grazing, not the type of animal.
The best figures I have ever achieved, by miles was a 26 month old, unworked bull. His figures were stunning and equivalent to a well-reared Limousin (percentage-wise), even though he lived on grass alone. The beef was excellent and very well-marbled, but it also included just a few really tough steaks that would have been better for making shoes if you'd have managed to get the nails through! So we won't be doing a bull again because we well our meat and everyone remembers the bad steak more than they do the good ones. If we were doing it for ourselves, another bull would tempt me.
Edited By Broomcroft on 1225821556
Clive
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- Location: Pembrokeshire
- Broomcroft
- Posts: 3005
- Joined: Wed Sep 06, 2006 4:42 am
- Location: Shropshire, England
- Contact:
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- Broomcroft
- Posts: 3005
- Joined: Wed Sep 06, 2006 4:42 am
- Location: Shropshire, England
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My shorts always finish earlier than the longs when on the same grazing, probably by about 2-3 months, so that makes sense. I get similar results with stockier longs as well. The taller ones are much harder to fill out which is why I'm keen to see the dexter keep to a low height and size. For me personally it's nothing to do with anything other than if you get over-high they will need filling in the other directions as well, and then you loose the ability to finish on grazing alone (at a reasonable age) which for me is what our cattle are all about and why we have dexters on our farm, and where a lot of the flavour comes from I feel.
Edited By Broomcroft on 1225876720
Edited By Broomcroft on 1225876720
Clive
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- Posts: 230
- Joined: Wed Sep 26, 2007 10:11 pm
- Location: Pembrokeshire
It is ( without offending anyone please) commomn sense that a short would finish sooner as they are at the end sooner. Everything grows from babies to a framhow many of you have sons who go from little boys to ganglling lads then they muscle up then with middle age they start storing fat instead of muscle. Cattle are the same short boys -- short cattle reach there destination sooner. Except humans can choose their destination thank goodness
Rob H
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