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E563 $3,010 Heifers and the $40,000 Calf Program Math You’re Not Running
Description
A 4% pre-weaning mortality rate buries about $27,000 a year on a 500-cow herd. At 5–6%, it's past $40,000. Still calling your calf program "good enough"?
This episode of The Bullvine Podcast breaks down the barn math nobody's running. U.S. dairy replacement heifers are at their lowest level since 1978. CoBank projects an 800,000-head shortfall over 2025–2026. Replacements are pushing past $3,000 a head — and every calf dying in the hutch row is a four-figure hole in a pipeline you can't easily refill.
What You'll Learn
- Why "two for $5" bull calves became $3,010 heifers — and what changed in 24 months
- How a $30 calf program quietly bleeds $27,000–$40,000 a year out of a 500-cow herd
- The Penn State math: $42–50 extra per calf vs. saving 1–2 heifers per 100 born
- Why 20–40% of calves still fail passive transfer — and the Brix line that fixes it
- The breakeven point where better colostrum and nutrition pencil at $3,010 per head
- The single question that exposes whether anyone really owns your calf barn
This is the economics conversation most dairies aren't having. With NAAB data showing 33% of semen on U.S. dairy cows is now beef, the heifer pipeline is the tightest it's been in nearly 50 years. The episode walks through four paths producers can take this month — including a 30-day colostrum audit using a Brix refractometer that costs less than one-tenth of a dead heifer.
Full article and sources: https://www.thebullvine.com/farm-economics-management/3010-heifers-and-the-40000-calf-program-math-youre-not-running/ Subscribe for straight-talking dairy analysis. Share this with a producer who needs it.