Chickpea wrote:Can any of the livestock owners here help me out with our back-of-the-envelope calculations?
I haven't much time, but here are a few things to get you thinking...
Pigs
Cross-breed or non-pedigree weaners - £30-40 each, depending on age with around £35 at 12 weeks as a baseline.
Birth-registered weaners - £40-50 each, more for ones from good lines.
Pedigree weaners - £50+, considerably more for ones from good lines (eg show winners etc).
Pedigree gilts - average (basically for breeding meat pigs), £80-100; good quality from good lines, £150+
Pedigree, proven sow from good lines, £200+ (a friend paid 500 guineas for a top-notch sow!)
Dairy cow
Good quality pedigree heifer, £450-550 with the best passing £1,000
Good quality pedigree cow, start at £750 or so, with most around the £1200 mark and the best going well above £2000 (again, I know someone who paid 4000 guineas for a top pedigree Holstein cow).
Cross-breeds, particularly to beef sires, will come in at a lot less and many dairy herds will be happy to sell you one. Some dairy herds will also sell you their reject heifers - fine for a house cow but not likely to be productive enough for a commercial herd.
Personally, I'd go for a Jersey if I could afford one but a good cow in milk will cost you around £1000 and an in-calf heifer around £750.
I haven't time to dig out my figures on other animals, but don't forget to add in:
Fencing (including gates, posts, wire, staples, tools, maintenance etc)
Appropriate housing
Water troughs (including all fittings, pipes, concrete etc)
Public liability insurance (if your animal gets out and is hit by a car, you may get sued)
Livestock insurance (if you have a £1000 cow and it gets stolen, how will you replace it)
Transport (do you need your own trailer - we've found it impossible to borrow or hire livestock trailers; and make sure it's insured against fire and theft)
Vet's bills (always have a contingency fund, plus the cost of worming, drenches, etc)
Cleaning costs if the animals have winter quarters (or are kept inside much of the time). You will need tools, sprayers, detergents, disinfectants.
Bedding (straw)
Feed (including storage - rat-proof, weather-proof, livestock proof; seed costs for reseeding fields, etc)
Appropriate clothing (so steel toed boots, gloves, overalls, waterproofs, etc)
Tags (including applicators)
Disposal of muck if the animals are kept inside
Regulatory costs (do you need a nitrates plan; do you need a fire risk assessment for sheds and housing - check the new regulations; transport competency certificate - check the new regulations;
Machinery costs - who is going to top the grass, reseed the grass, etc
And a final thought - who will look after the livestock if you're away and will you have to pay them? We do not have not anyone prepared to look after our livestock, so there always has to be one of us here (I've not had a night away from our place in almost two years so far).