Cooperative Herds
     Pharo Cattle Company is much more than one family and one ranch. In reality, we could be described as a multi-family owned and operated seedstock producer.
     The demand for Pharo Cattle Company bulls has increased tremendously over the past several years. In order to meet this demand and to keep our prices affordable, we thought it necessary to increase the number of bulls offered in our annual bull sales. This task is not as easy as it sounds because we refuse to sacrifice quality for quantity!
     The Solution. Over the years our seed-stock program has evolved into a network of outstanding cooperative producers. We’ve been able to increase our numbers, without sacrificing quality, by selecting the best bull calves from a few select cooperator herds. I’m referring to producers who have philosophies, genetics and breeding programs very similar to our own. For the most part, these are breeders we have been working very closely with for several years.
      Biographies for most of our cooperative producers can be found on the next few pages. These producers have signed a contract with Pharo Cattle Company. In so doing, they have agreed to abide by some strict guidelines, including the following philosophies.

Philosophies Behind Our Bulls

1. Honesty and integrity will never be compromised.
2. We will manage the natural resources placed under our control in a sustainable manner.
3. The breed of cattle is not nearly as important as the breeding program and the philosophies that produce  the cattle.
4. Cows are run in a real-world environment, as tough or tougher than the environment most commercial cows are run in.
5. We let the environment sort out the good ones, while we show absolutely no sympathy for open, late, or dry cows.
6. We will never make an excuse for a cow. A cow must produce and wean a calf every year to remain in the herd.
7. By limiting feed resources, we try to apply sufficient pressure on the cowherd to force out the unadapted and infertile animals — at least 10 percent each year.
8. In addition to growth and performance, we select for some other vital economic traits like fertility, calving ease, moderate cow size, fleshing ability, structural correctness, disposition, and longevity.
9. Replacement heifers are developed on a low-cost, forage-based diet with minimum supplements. We only want the most efficient and most adapted heifers to make it into the cowherd.
10. A bull calf must be born unassisted from an efficient, moderate-sized cow that has never missed in       order to make it into one of our bull sales.

    Bull Selection. When we go into these cooperative herds we are extremely selective. Performance is important, but we also select for calving ease, structural correctness, disposition, fleshing ability and thickness. In addition to all this we require that the bulls’ mothers be efficient, moderate-sized cows that have never been pampered. We can’t afford to make any mistakes because our reputation is at stake. We only want the best of the best! As time goes on and as these herds improve we have been able to select more and more of their bulls for our program.