domsmith wrote:Robin your at it again! lol
I read what you have to say and have spoken to you about it. but i have to say i think you have all missed the point.
The reason why dexter cattle are sold at low prices is because they are not commercial cattle. It does not matter what anyone says about making a living from them or not, the buyers of commercial cattle will not buy them.
until you address that then there is little bottom to the market, so they will continue to trade low.
if i have to sell angus cattle quickly i take them to the market and i get a market price for them. if i were to do that with dexters i would get pocket change.
so to get a price for them you have to sell to the specialist buyer, and thats the point they are specialist. If the buyers arent looking you cant sell unless they are cheap.
i dont see how you can engineer sales to suit your needs, if you need to sell, you need to sell!
You could of course create such demand for dexter beef that finishing stock goes through the roof, that would filter down through the market. but dexter breeders and retailers are a disperate bunch.
i think you will have to put up with the prices for some time to come.
dominic
You make a good point about them not being 'commercial' cattle Dom, but it's not just Dexters but all native breeds that fall into this category. Yes Hereford & Angus have their schemes which help them along a bit, but outside of these schemes it is a waste of time taking native breeds ad hoc to market unless they have BB, Lim or a few other continentals on the passport, certainly in Yorkshire marts.
Regarding addressing this point, by far the biggest issue to overcome is inconsistency. The breed standard, as it stands, is not producing a consistent product for either the butcher or the breeder. Very few sellers of Dexter cattle give any stats in adverts other than age, and in a breed that has so much variability within it stats are of paramount importance if a 'commercial' buyer is to hitch up the trailer and spend money on fuel. If they then arrive and find Laurel & Hardy they're going to want to pay less than if they arrive to find two animals of the same size and/or they know that the animal is 250kg beforehand, having been fed on barley and haylage, for example.
My advice here and above comes from my experience as a buyer, I'm not aiming to annoy or upset anyone; The wording is also important in ads - facts about the animals need to be accurate. I know that not everyone understands the genetics of cattle but if you're going to write an advert, please check it for accuracy and make sure that you understand the mechanics of, say the inheritance of short leg or the polled gene, before mentioning it. You don't want to pass on inaccuracies to potential buyers and you don't want to appear as if you don't know what you're doing to more knowledgeable buyers. You also don't want to set yourself up for being asked questions to which you don't know the answer.
Words like 'nice' and 'lovely' are adjectives that require a noun and how they are used do say a lot about the seller and the animal. If you can pinpoint why it is a nice heifer that will do more good than just saying that it is a nice heifer, as that alone just says to me that the seller likes their animal. 'Good temperament' or 'excellent mothering ability' are better ways to describe them. Photos are very useful but they have to be good ones, clear, bright and with the animal standing naturally, not doing some kind of yoga, being held 'perfectly' or a perfect headshot that shows none of the body. The worst I have ever seen was of a group of sheep that were behind hurdles, with a dog sat between the camera and the hurdles & the image was so blurred that they looked like clouds on the horizon. Current photos are also essential - I don't want to know how it looked as a calf or sixth months ago on summer grass.
robin walker wrote:The butcher , the restauranteur and the member of the public that know their beef are quite able to take a full carcass , let's not mess about selling a box here and there lets get the price they are worth and furnish those with the full animal . This can i must admit only be done by marketing , marketing is now the main tool in selling . We are messing about in the Dexter world and it is about time it was rectified .
I know Dominic you think I am on a cloud but I know by getting continuity with Dexter breeders and educating them in marketing this will work .
If decent prices are to be achieved within these parameters the breeder must know what they're going to do with the offspring before they put the bull in. It's no good breeding and hoping, it requires you to know who your buyer is and what they want, planning for sire selection, weaning, feeding, etc. all to supply your end market within the budget you have to deal with. There's no point spending a fortune on the very best feeding if it ends up costing you more than you can realistically expect to receive back, even if you do achieve a huge carcass. If Dexters are to compete against continentals or Angus/Herefords breeders need to work on both consistency AND the bottom line before they push all the responsibility onto the marketing.
I've made a couple of suggestions that individual breeders can adopt which don't rely upon any cohesion between breeders, namely that if you're aiming for the smallholder/new cattle person as your target market then offering to take back stock in the event of a change of heart, loss of land or a realisation that they've taken on more than they can handle is needed to prevent you you being undercut by your own animals.
The second suggestion, of established breeders going out there and buying all the 'cheap' stock and either beefing or marking them up as appropriate is something we can all do, right now, and make a bit of money in the process
providing that the animals being offered up for sale really are cheap, which brings me back to my previous post; I posted the current average prices from this site, and to me they don't look bad.
Can we discuss what price would breeders wish to achieve for their animals? Pinpointing what the goal is is the first step towards achieving it.