Andrew Stewart of Greensburg is the fourth generation to
operate the family farm. He and his wife
Darci live in a house on the cattle farm with their three children: Matthew, 11;
Haleigh, 5; and Ella Kate, 4. Andrew
attended Purdue University and received his Bachelor of Science degree in
Agricultural Economics in May of 2006.
Before graduation, he received an offer to work for Farm Credit
Mid-America in their office in Louisville.
He worked there for 5 years and was able to gain some valuable insights
and experience that he was able to put to use on their farm operation.
"My great grandfather, Arthur, started farming in the
early 1900s. He sold his first bag of
seed in 1918 and there has been seed sold under the Stewart brand ever
since. My grandfather John and great
uncle Gilman bought the first Angus cows in 1955. My cousin, Josh Gunn, and I are the fourth
generation to farm the family farm.”
Stewarts farm commercial corn, seed beans, seed wheat,
alfalfa hay, and have a herd of 200 registered Angus cows. Andrew’s main responsibility on the farm is
managing the cow herd. “Stewart Select
Angus is a performance seedstock operation that is focused on raising high-quality
breeding bulls for the commercial cattleman.
A seedstock operation is one that sells breeding stock (bulls, heifers,
and cows) to commercial producers along with other seedstock operators,” Andrew
explains. “Being a performance herd
means that we measure our cattle in almost every way possible to help them be
more predictable and profitable for our customers. We measure birth weight, weaning weight,
yearling weight, hip height, and so ultrasound measurements to determine ribeye
area, intramuscular fat, rib fat, rump fat.
All of these measurements and more factor into the profitability of the
bull for each buyer.”
The cows at Stewart Select Angus are on pasture for 10 to 11
months of the year. “We have an annual
herd test for our cattle the first part of December where we give annual
vaccinations and draw blood from each cow to check for certain diseases. This is just like me going to the doctor for
an annual checkup.”
Most of the year, the cows get a mixture of several
different forages in the pastures, including grass hay, alfalfa hay, wheat
silage, corn silage, and clover. In the
fall, the cows can graze on corn stalks after the corn has been harvested. “During this mid-gestation time frame of the
cow, when the calves have already been weaned, they will be able to pick
through the field and find enough nutrients to meet their needs. The bulls that I develop will get a mix of
corn, corn gluten pellets, and soybean hull pellets to help them develop into
sound breeding bulls at 15 months of age.”
Stewarts have 200 cows that give birth every year. In addition to those 200 cows, they will
raise approximately 60 bulls on the home farm, 20 bulls at two different sites
in Indiana and Montana, 60 replacement heifers, and almost all of the 200 calves
that were born that year. On April 1,
they will have about 520 head of cattle of various ages to take care of at home
and another 20 off-site.
“We bale straw and
corn stalks to bed the barns that our cattle are in routinely to make sure it
is fresh. When the temperature gets
colder and the cows will need more energy to keep their body heat, we adjust
their feed and give them an additional 10 to 15%. Cows will actually perform better in 40-degree
temperatures than 80-degree temperatures, because of their hair coat. When their hair coat gets wet and it is
windy, they will require more energy to keep their body heat constant.” An enclosed shed with small pens for birthing
helps baby calves get off to the best
start without having the added stress of the cold.
Andrew says his favorite part of his job is
seeing a new calf being born. “Since I start
calving around Christmas time, it helps to remind us of God’s gift of Jesus and
the power of all His creation. Being
able to have our kids grow up on the farm is also something that I love about
my job. The farm teaches them many
things such as responsibility, hard work, problem solving, innovation, and many
more.”
2 comments:
Great walk-through.
I am delighted to read this article..thank you for sharing.!!
Sounds like a wonderful family and a thriving business! Happy to know there are people out there that do this wonderful work. My grandparents were farmers in North Dakota, so it is in my blood. Even though I am not a farmer I salute you that are doing such a great job! Keep up the good work and God Bless you!
A fellow Hoosier! cmhwheel@yahoo.com
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