Post Weaning Value-Added Program – Feedlot (PVAP-FEEDLOT)
The Post Weaning Valued Added Program - Feedlot (PVAP-FEEDLOT) began in 2019 through a grant from the Kentucky Agricultural Development Fund and is administered by the University of Kentucky and the Kentucky Beef Network. The objective of PVAP-FEEDLOT is to encourage cow-calf producers to retain ownership and capture added value from their investment in beef cattle genetics, facilities, and improved management through diversified marketing strategies.
Justification: The quality of Kentucky cattle has improved tremendously over the last 20 years. Progressive producers may be able to capture more added value and a greater return on their investment in genetics by owning their cattle through the feedlot phase. This program will also provide an opportunity for cow-calf producers to gain valuable feedlot and carcass data on their herds.
Eligibility:
- Home raised calves weaned on the farm using CPH-45 protocol, then enrolled in the Tri-County Steer Carcass Futurity Cooperative, Lewis, Iowa or similar approved program were eligible.
- Only producers who have never retained ownership through a commercial feedlot were eligible.
Procedures:
- Potential participants were identified by the local UK ANR agent or KBN facilitator.
- An orientation meeting was conducted by UK Specialists and UK ANR agents for participants.
- A site visit was conducted by the UK Specialist, UK ANR Agent or KBN facilitator to evaluate the calves and plan the weaning process and design a proper feeding program.
- Calves were worked, weighed, EID tagged, PI-BVD tested and weaned according to CPH-45 protocol.
- At the end of the preconditioning period, calves were delivered to central shipping point. Calves were graded, weighed and valued using current market information prior to shipment to the feedlot.
- Upon harvest of cattle and receiving the final closeouts, a wrap up meeting was conducted by UK specialists for one on one evaluation and interpretation of each producer’s data.
- Producers received a $75/head PVAP-incentive payment for completing the program.
Results:
- 65 calves from 8 producers in western KY were shipped in August to Nilan Feedyard in Oakland, Iowa. These calves were harvested in January and February. A summary of the carcass data, disposition score and closeout of profit/loss is shown below. These figures also show a comparison to other cattle in the Tri-County Steer Futurity Program (TCSF) along with current national averages. Kentucky cattle compared favorably with other cattle in the program and were worth nearly $40 more in the carcass versus other TCSF cattle. After the CFAP payment these producers netted roughly $160 per head more than if these calves had been sold as feeder calves in Kentucky.