Herd m *■ Kinsley Construction Company, ivianager for i 5 yea rs. (Continued from Page A 1) South Branch Farms began in the late ’6os, when Kinsley first began purchasing land in the Seven Valleys area. The farm in- Lancaster Farming, Saturday, November 9, 2002-A29 eludes 1,200 owned and 200 rent ed acres. Livingston is joined by full-time herdsman Mike Wel gosh, herdsman. The majority of the acreage is in grass. “Traditionally we have grown our own grain crops, but his year we rented out the grain ground to deal exclu sively with grass,” said Livingston. With the small amount of grain neces sary to feed the cattle, Livingston figures it may be more cost effec tive to purchase, rather than to grow their own grain. The farm is in the process of trimming back the herd to 200 brood cows to extend the grazing season a little more into winter, according to Livingston. The Breeding Program “We very much have a balanced breeding pro gram,” he said. “I would prefer that the cattle are average or slightly above average in every trait versus something that might be at the top of the herd in one or two traits but has other areas they might be weak in. “The first hurdle they have to jump is having no health problems,” he said. The cattle must be “functional and sound in their makeup, and be easy keeping cattle.” Livingston's words to live by in breeding sea son are that “you have whatever problems you put up with. “If you’re willing to keep open cows around, you’re going to have in fertility; if you keep sour dispositions around, you’ll end up with cows with an attitude; if you start to pull calves, you’re going to have calving problems,” he said. “If you have zero tol erance for these things, you’ll find that it doesn’t take too many generations before these problems virtually dis appear. If a bad animal crops up, it will be one or two head versus a widespread problem.” Livingston estimates that he pulled six calves in the last year, with a calf crop from 200 cows. Most of the cows are 3-5 years old. Extensive record keeping is the cor nerstone for making breeding and culling de cisions at the farm. “Most of the cattle here probably have 30-40 dif ferent traits that we have them scored for in their lifetime,” he said. Record-keeping in cludes a calving score (one is unassisted, five is an abnormal presenta tion), and notes on a cow’s mothering ability. Weaning weights are followed by yearling weights, at which time the calves are ultra sounded for carcass traits such as intramus cular fat and ribeye area. Records are used by the Angus Associa tion to calculated Ex pected Progeny Differ ences (EPDs). The fall breeding sea son is kept to a tight 45 days because “the win dow where we have real ly good dependable weather is smaller in the fall. We don’t start until it really cools off, and we’re done by the first of (Turn to Page A 39)