Indeed a subject for another thread Rob and one that has been debated at length with the same conclusions.Perhaps a subject for another thread, but I'd be interested to see your two partial budgets for two herds with, say, females at £1000 and £500. You'd have to have a hefty production advantage to cover the extra depreciation and finance costs.
I would have believed you more had you snapped Lisa's hand off rather than making your excuses. Animals are not worth anything unless there is someone willing to pay it. Sitting on your hands at auction is not going to help prices. You may not want to expand your herd and therefore you are not willing to pay any more for those animals. You're no different to me. We can't will prices up, sadly.
I agree about beefing them though - if you can beef them for £1000+ after costs. Not many people can, hence why the prices are lower overall.
What people usually fail to budget for is their time and effort. £500 or thereabouts is about right if you are looking at ‘field’ cows but not if you are looking to do anything with them other than eat them or breed more ‘field’ cows. Perhaps this is why you advocate that Dexters are not for novices?
No excuses - I take the health of my herd very seriously. What started me off on this road was the result of a BVD test on a calf that I had bought in from someone who didn’t go to shows or sales but did buy stock up privately. Luckily for me this calf had been exposed (not by vaccination) but was not PI. It was not exposed to it here as all my animals later tested completely clean. So no, I do not want to expand my herd with anything bought in but not for the reason that you imply.
Foundation stock is not to be found in the classified ads. Like any other breeder who takes it seriously I am highly critical, perhaps over critical of my own stock but if I had not assumed that ‘a Dexter was a Dexter’ when I first started off I could have saved myself much heartache and expense along the way.
‘Quality is long remembered after price is forgotten’ and you don’t buy it for £500 unless it is virtually at the end of its breeding life.