Sounds high to me. I sell fat cattle to folks to custom slaughter. They pay me for the live steer and pay the butcher themselves. I think it usually comes out closer to $4-5 a pound. But I’m selling the fat cattle at current market price that feedlots get for their fat cattle. I’m not gouging people on live price.
A big % of that is going to be hamburger meat too. Too high in my opinion. I watch the sales and buy only choice cuts from HEB or Kroger and never ever pay full price for meat. 5.98 choice ribeye's last week for example. If it is just for convenience, then that's another thing, but you usually pay more for convenience. I`ve never bought into buying a whole beef anyway. There is a misconception that it cheaper in the long run. I think not.
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I can give you a super deal on a wild cattle hunt. Crazy ***** Limousine, bad fence. Need them gone. Seriously, THEY BE WILD. Be better in cold weather for processing......
80% yield = 705.6 pounds of take home product.
Total cost = 2794.70
Final cost = $3.96 per pound.
You cannot buy all that for that cheap at the grocery store. You can’t even buy hamburger meat that cheap at the grocery store. We usually get a third of ours in hamburger. You can get a s little or as much hamburger as you want depending on the way you have the carcass cut. If you are hell bent on paying $8.50 a pound for it, I’ll sell you one, have it butchered, and deliver it to you.
Keep in mind, this isn’t a “money making” part of my operation. I feed out the unmarketable steers that I can’t sell to the feedlots. Something that broke a leg, missing a tail, crooked back, blind, that sort of thing. So I don’t always have a steady supply. But I keep them on feed until they are finished. Generally, the cattle I butcher will grade mid to high choice with a few primes sprinkled in. Now, if I could just figure out how to produce a steer that all rib eyes and t bones…
Dang. Now I need to figure out how to have the conversation with my friend who’s quoting 8.50.
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I would start with the Dave Ramsey question “is that the best price you can do?” Then go into the “did some checking around and the average price ranges from $3-$5 hanging weight” “why would I pay more for this one?”
This ain’t about friends, this is business. I don’t mind someone making money, just don’t try to make it all off of me.
80% yield = 705.6 pounds of take home product.
Total cost = 2794.70
Final cost = $3.96 per pound.
You cannot buy all that for that cheap at the grocery store. You can’t even buy hamburger meat that cheap at the grocery store. We usually get a third of ours in hamburger. You can get a s little or as much hamburger as you want depending on the way you have the carcass cut. If you are hell bent on paying $8.50 a pound for it, I’ll sell you one, have it butchered, and deliver it to you.
Keep in mind, this isn’t a “money making” part of my operation. I feed out the unmarketable steers that I can’t sell to the feedlots. Something that broke a leg, missing a tail, crooked back, blind, that sort of thing. So I don’t always have a steady supply. But I keep them on feed until they are finished. Generally, the cattle I butcher will grade mid to high choice with a few primes sprinkled in. Now, if I could just figure out how to produce a steer that all rib eyes and t bones…
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