Posts Tagged ‘raw meat’

Happy Holidays

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Perry Farms wish you and your family the happiest of holidays. We are truly blessed here at Perry Farms; we enjoy good food, friends, and a warm happy family.

Many events helped structure 2009, some good, some better, but all significant to our farm and way of life.

The weather this year was good most of the year, with rain plentiful and aiding in a bountiful harvest and snow available for the kids to enjoy more than just one day.

Our animals were healthy and productive again this year. We are happy with our livestock and the large part they play for our farm.

Hunting was good this season, with deer plentiful and healthy. Our freezer was replenished with some high quality venison.

Our taxidermy business was stable most of the year and busy now as the deer season has hit its full swing.

This website is better than ever before, thanks in large part to our webmaster and neighbor, Kevin. He takes great care of us and is a good friend.

2009 was tough economically for everyone, but overall, Perry Farms enjoyed another blessed year.

Happy Holidays from Perry Farms

NCBA Opposes House Proposal To Extend Current Estate Tax Law

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

 The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association (NCBA) is extremely disappointed that Congress has ignored repeated calls for estate tax (“death tax”) reform. The House Rules Committee announced today that H.R. 4154 by Rep. Earl Pomeroy (D-ND) will be considered under a closed rule. The Pomeroy bill would permanently extend the death tax at 2009 levels, without indexing for inflation.

 “The Pomeroy bill is a disservice to America’s family farmers and other small businesses,” said NCBA President Gary Voogt. “By keeping a flawed law in place, Congress will simply extend our problems with the current system into the future.”

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Economic Research Service (ERS), farm estates are 5-20 times more likely to incur estate taxes than other estates. In fact, according to ERS estimates, one in ten farm estates (farms with sales of $250,000 or more annually) are likely to owe estate taxes in 2009. Farmers and ranchers are often forced to sell off land, equipment, or even the entire ranch just to pay off tax liabilities. This is money that could otherwise be re-invested to grow the family business and hand it down to future generations.

 “This is not a tax on the ‘wealthy elite’,” Voogt continued. “It is a huge burden—and in some cases, a death sentence—on family farms and small businesses.”

Most cattle producers have businesses that have been passed down through the generations for more than 50 years, and 15 percent of producers have operations that have been in the family for more than 100 years. Most of the time, these assets have already faced taxes two or three times over the course of a lifetime.

 “Taxing America’s farmers and ranchers out of business will impact all Americans,” Voogt continued. “Not only do our family farmers play a critical role in feeding the world’s growing population and American families right here at home, they also help preserve our nation’s treasured open space and environmental resources.”

NCBA continues to support a dual-track approach for death tax reform, including additional relief and an overall exemption for agriculture. Both types of reform are critical.

 “A simple extension of current law is unacceptable,” said Voogt. “America’s farmers and ranchers deserve more than the status quo; they deserve true reform.”

Source: www.cattlenetwork.com

www.PerryFarmsGrassFedBeef.com

NC Beef Farms

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

CAB: As Cows Eat, So Grow The Calves

Your cowherd checklist might look pretty sparse after the calves are weaned and rebreeding is confirmed. Maybe the cows regained some condition and they’re coasting now on crop residue. Next item would be, what, calving?

More properly, the next item would be nutrition during late gestation. New results from the University of Nebraska’s West Central Research and Extension Center say cow nutrition in the months before calving can determine their calves’ future production.

This is called fetal programming.

“There’s a positive effect on heifer fertility, which is important to ranchers for sure, and then there was also a benefit to weaning weights in some cases,” says Rick Funston, a researcher who has been involved in three different multi-year studies on the topic.

When they followed steer calves through the feedlot, another result became apparent.

“The greatest impact was on quality grade, and a greater share of that was on the upper two-thirds of Choice,” he says. That is the marbling mark cattle need to be accepted into the Certified Angus Beef ® (CAB ®) brand, a gateway to more quality premiums.

Funston’s work focused on protein supplementation during the late fall and early winter.

 “That’s traditionally when producers would supplement cows, in that dormant grazing period,” he says. Other fetal programming work has looked at early- to mid-gestation nutrition, but Funston says that’s rarely a period for concern.

 “Unless we’re in a drought, that’s really a non-issue in beef production in spring-calving herds,” he says.

The latest study divided cows into four groups. For three years in a row they were either grazing native pasture or corn stalks, and then they were split again with half receiving supplement and half not.

Both of the groups fed a daily pound of 28% crude protein supplement showed calf benefits, but the effects were more apparent for those on winter range. Funston says that’s probably because they were the most nutrient deficient, thus the results were magnified.

Although the supplemented cows went into calving in better body condition, all had similar pregnancy rates in the next breeding season.

 “In all of our studies, supplementation almost never had an impact on birth weights, but it apparently impacts a metabolic system that provides a different gain and type of deposition,” Funston says.

The steers whose mothers were supplemented on range had a 48-pound (lb.) advantage in weaning weight, and they maintained that edge through harvest. Their carcasses were nearly 42 lb. heavier.

For those who own the cattle at harvest, the real payout comes in the form of greater carcass quality grade and carcass weights.

Offspring of the supplemented cows graded 86% Choice, compared to 71% in the non-supplemented group. However, the premium Choice percentage dropped 18 points without the added protein, 39% vs. 21%. Yield was virtually the same.

“The increase in percent Choice, without an increase in yield grade, translated to a $47 advantage in carcass value,” Funston says.

Cells are already differentiated into muscle, fat, organs or bone by late gestation, he says: “So it might just be an overall programming of nutrient utilization. The perceived lower plane of nutrition from those fetuses in the non-supplemented group might be programming the way they use nutrients postnatally.”

The reproduction benefit to heifer calves might come from the fact that certain nutrients can alter blood flow to the fetus and those same nutrients could affect hormone secretion.

The important practical note in all of this, says Funston, is that it’s more about keeping cows in good body condition than anything else.

 “I’m not saying supplementation is the magic treatment. It’s probably total cow nutrition,” Funston says. “It might be achieved by supplementation or by higher condition going into winter.”

He recommends ranchers look at what feedstuffs are available locally, and those planning to feed harvested forage should test for protein content. Early weaning could reduce the need for supplementation, so that’s one more consideration in fitting economics to each producer’s system.

Source: www.cattlenetwork.com

www.PerryFarmsGrassFedBeef.com