Things You'll Need
- Calves
- Calf containment area
- Feed
- Water
- Feed troughs
- Water troughs
- Squeeze chute
- Pasture
- Shelter
- Fences
- Feed storage area
- Tractor and/or 1- to 1 3/4-ton truck
Instructions
Raising Your Calves
Purchase feeder calves from a reputable breeder. Keep calves in the calf containment area for two weeks to observe them for disease, stress, and maladjustment - and to treat these conditions. Consult your veterinarian or extension service for the proper starter feed and feeding schedule, and make sure the calves have clean water at all times. Clean the containment area daily.
Vaccinate, castrate, dehorn, and treat any parasites or medical conditions during initial containment. Training is available from your local extension service. A squeeze chute is necessary to safely restrain calves for treatment. You may purchase calves already vaccinated, castrated, and dehorned, but the squeeze chute is still necessary to administer routine veterinary care.
Move your cattle to a pasture. A narrow alley should lead between containment, pasture, and shipping areas. All animal areas must have durable fencing. Provide shelter from mud, wind, and rain. Pasture shelter is usually a roof on poles and a windbreak, in an area with good drainage. The pasture must have accessible feed troughs for supplemental feeding, and water troughs with clean water available at all times.
Supplemental feed is usually required as cattle grow and pasture is depleted. This is hay or silage. Nutritional supplementation is based on your location (such as areas with selenium-deficient soil) and the quality of feed. Store feed in a dry, dark location that is free of rodents and insect pests, and is accessible to the pasture. Transport feed and remove waste with a truck or tractor. A truck is helpful for transporting cattle as well.
Cattle ship to slaughter at 12 to 24 months old. They must be slaughtered at a USDA-certified facility. Determine if you will ship the cattle yourself or hire a private trucking outfit. The agreement between you and the restaurant determines whether you use a slaughter facility that fully dresses the carcasses and prepares certain cuts of meat, and who will pay for the cost of processing the beef.