High Altitude Limousin At Reynolds Land & Cattle & Cattle Industry News Podcast Por  arte de portada

High Altitude Limousin At Reynolds Land & Cattle & Cattle Industry News

High Altitude Limousin At Reynolds Land & Cattle & Cattle Industry News

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It’s The Ranch It Up Radio Show! Join Jeff Tigger Erhardt, Rebecca Wanner AKA BEC and their crew as we hear how high elevation Limousin cattle thrive at Reynolds Land & Cattle. A great story of history and adaptability at this Colorado Ranch. Plus, the latest news, market reports, the ranch channel sales calendar and lots more all wrapped into this brand-new episode of The Ranch It Up Radio Show. Be sure to subscribe on your favorite podcasting app or on the Ranch It Up Radio Show YouTube Channel. Reynolds Land & Cattle: Limousin, Lim-Flex, Angus, & Simmental Cross Genetics Built For Real Ranch Profit Today’s cattle producers aren’t just buying bulls and heifers — they’re investing in genetics that drive long-term profitability. With more than 40 years of production-sale history, Reynolds Land & Cattle focuses on practical, performance-based cattle combining Limousin muscle, efficiency, and strong maternal value for commercial operations. The 2026 Bull & Heifer Sale features ranch-raised Limousin, Lim-Flex, Angus, and Simmental cross genetics developed to perform in real-world conditions while adding pounds and value to the calf crop. The Reynolds Land & Cattle Program Focus Calving ease with performance growthEfficient feed conversionSound structure and good dispositionFertile, long-lasting cowsCattle built to thrive in tough environments What Sets Reynolds Apart Rather than chasing extremes, Reynolds Land & Cattle emphasizes balanced cattle with moderate birth weights, strong growth, and practical development. All sale cattle are raised in working ranch conditions and tested for fertility, PAP, and TRICH, with structural soundness and disposition treated as essential traits. Sale Highlights Strong Limousin-influenced genetics for muscle, growth, and maternal valueRanch-developed cattle built for commercial environmentsBalanced maternal and terminal performance Sale Information Friday, March 20, 2026 11:00 AM – Beef Lunch 1:00 PM – Sale Begins Location Reynolds Land & Cattle 17463 County Road 19 Sanford, CO 81151 Sale Day Phones Rod Reynolds – 719-588-1230 Troy Reynolds – 719-580-1308 Ryan Reynolds – 719-588-1532 Joe Cary – 719-580-8702 Sale Consultant: MC Marketing Kiley McKinna – 402-350-3447 Wiley Fanta – 320-287-0751 Online Bidding: DV Auction Cattle Industry News JBS Workers Confirm Strike Workers at the largest meat processing company in the world will strike at its Colorado plant, according to the labor union representing those workers. The strike at JBS's plant in Greeley will start on March 16. The strike comes after the workers gave notice of cancellation of their contract due to alleged unfair labor practices. JBS was one of about 20 food companies that settled a 2024 federal lawsuit for over $200 million over employee wage fixing. JBS says it employs more than 270,000 people around the world — 3,800 of whom are based in Greeley, where JBS USA is headquartered — and pays $3.1 billion for livestock each year, making it the world's largest meat supplier. References: https://www.cbsnews.com/colorado/news/jbs-workers-confirm-strike-colorado-meat-processing-plant-labor-practices/ https://meatingplace.com/union-sets-date-for-potential-strike-at-jbs-greeley-beef-plant Lawsuit Over Electronic Identification Tags A lawsuit over the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s mandatory electronic identification ear tag rule for cattle and bison is moving forward, with a federal court request in South Dakota to set the rule aside. The New Civil Liberties Alliance or NCLA — which is representing ranchers, farmers, and livestock producers in the case — argues that the USDA and its Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service or APHIS unlawfully required electronically readable identification, or EID, ear tags for certain cattle and bison moving across state lines, replacing long-used visual tags. According to the NCLA’s case summary, APHIS in 2013 allowed several forms of official identification for certain interstate cattle and bison movements, including both visual-only and electronically readable ear tags. But in May 2024, APHIS issued a final rule requiring that official ear tags sold for or applied to certain cattle and bison be readable both visually and electronically. The plaintiffs’ March 5 summary judgment brief argues that the USDA did not adequately justify the change and that the rule imposes added costs on producers while failing to solve the agency’s stated traceability concerns. In the filing, plaintiffs said the rule “mandates that America’s ranchers and farmers use visually-readable electronic identification (“EID”) ear tags when moving certain cattle and bison interstate” and argued the rule “increases the cost of raising cattle by approximately $3 per head.” The NCLA said the USDA had previously agreed visual-only tags were effective in tracing disease in cattle and bison and had allowed producers to choose between visual-only and ...
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