The Bullvine

The Bullvine

Welcome to the official podcast of The Bullvine, where we dive deep into the world of dairy farming and the people behind the scenes. Each episode is crafted to serve your passion for dairy excellence, bringing you the latest updates, expert interviews, and inspiring success stories from the industry. Whether you're a seasoned farmer, a genetics enthusiast, or simply curious about the dairy sector, our podcast promises to keep you informed and engaged with its firsthand knowledge and relevant insights. Join us in revolutionizing dairy farming, one story at a time!

  1. E543 The Economic Reality of Pellet-Free Robotic Milking. A Retrofit Barn Could Lose $71K Trying.

    22H AGO

    E543 The Economic Reality of Pellet-Free Robotic Milking. A Retrofit Barn Could Lose $71K Trying.

    Double Creek Dairy in Merced, California reports $171,000 a year saved going pellet-free on eight DeLaval V300s. Run the same play in a 240-cow free-flow retrofit and the first-year math points to a $44,000 to $71,000 hole. The Bullvine Podcast breaks down the AMS pellet-free pitch sweeping spring 2026 dealer meetings. Rodenburg's traffic data pegs free-flow fetch rates at 16% of the herd per day versus 8.5% in guided-flow. That gap decides whether pellet-free survives contact with your barn — before a single ration change. What You'll Learn Why Matt Strickland's $171K pencils at Double Creek but may not pencil at yoursThe 10-week transition curve: 9-12% milk drop and what it costs a 240-cow herdFree-flow vs. guided-flow: the barn-walk test every operator should runWhy pellet cost alone ($132-$500/ton per Vita Plus) misses the real decisionThe four red flags that should trigger a 30-day nutritionist-service-lender meetingWhat USDA ERR-356 actually says about AMS payback curvesMost U.S. AMS installations are free-flow retrofits — long alleys, one robot at the end of the pen, no selection gate. Research from Bach (2007 JDS) and Penner (Saskatchewan) shows pellet allocation has little effect on yield in controlled conditions, but pulling the bribe without fixing the concrete stacks transition losses, fetch labor, and early culls into real first-year drag. The Heeg family's guided-flow build in Colby, Wisconsin works. Most retrofits aren't that barn. Full article and sources: https://www.thebullvine.com/management/robotic-milking/the-economic-reality-of-pellet-free-robotic-milking-a-retrofit-barn-could-lose-71k-trying/ Subscribe for straight-talking dairy analysis. Share this with a producer who needs it.

    25 min
  2. E542 Gene-Edited Cows Are Legal. Your 2029 Milk Cheque Isn’t Safe.

    1D AGO

    E542 Gene-Edited Cows Are Legal. Your 2029 Milk Cheque Isn’t Safe.

    FDA cleared SLICK Holsteins in 2022. Health Canada cleared gene-edited pork in January 2026. No processor has agreed to pay base price for gene-edited milk — and you'd own the cows. The Bullvine Podcast breaks down the trap hot-belt dairies are walking into this spring. A 5,000-cow operation bleeding $2–4 million a year on heat stress gets a SLICK semen pitch that sounds like rescue. The math says write a different cheque first. We show you which one, what it costs, and the five questions every producer should put to their milk buyer before a single SLICK straw enters the tank. What You'll Learn Why cooling capex pays back in 3–5 years regardless of what your processor decidesHow a 4–6% recovery of lost summer milk puts $236–$354 per cow back in the tankWhy Lactanet's April 2026 flip to 40/60 Fat:Protein just reshaped every SLICK decision in CanadaThe Danone–Zoetis template — and why gene-edited dairy procurement will probably follow itWhy SLICK is permanent and your milk buyer isn'tThe five-question procurement letter you can send this monthWhy This Episode Matters Indexes are volatile. Traits are permanent. Once PRLR-SLICK is in your herd, it's there for decades — even if a major retailer publishes a no-gene-edited dairy policy in 2029 that your processor has to honour. rBST was a decision you could stop making. SLICK is a cow standing in your parlor for five more lactations whether anyone wants her milk or not. Real money. But not rescue money. Keywords dairy podcast, SLICK Holstein, gene editing, PRLR, heat stress, FDA, Health Canada, CTNBio, Embrapa, Danone, Zoetis, CLARIFIDE Plus, DWP$, TPI, LPI, Lactanet, Holstein USA, Net Merit, Cheese Merit, polled genetics, VikingGenetics, ABS Global, Acceligen, Class III, component pricing, Arizona dairy, Brazil dairy, 2029, procurement, Bullvine Listen & Connect Full article and sources: https://www.thebullvine.com/genetics/gene-edited-cows-are-legal-your-2029-milk-cheque-isnt-safe/ Subscribe for straight-talking dairy analysis. Share this with a producer who needs it

    12 min
  3. E541 The New FMMO Rule Costs a 500-Cow Dairy $97,750 a Year – Before a Mile of Freight

    2D AGO

    E541 The New FMMO Rule Costs a 500-Cow Dairy $97,750 a Year – Before a Mile of Freight

    One of ND's last 18 Grade A dairies now hauls milk 5 hours one way. The 2025 FMMO rule pulls $97,750–$106,950 annually from a 500-cow herd at 230 cwt/cow — before freight. North Dakota lost two plants in 30 months. The Holle family's 1,000-cow operation called it "really, really hard." Federal Order 30 hauling jumped 30% per-farm from $0.6137 to $0.7969/cwt. Stack FMMO's 85–93¢/cwt cut on Class III $14.59, and margins vanish. The Bullvine Podcast walks the barn math and three paths forward. Why ND's Red Zone on the Dairy Farm Extinction Clock signals immediate riskHow FMMO make allowances land on your milk check — $97k gone from 500 cowsRoute erosion math: one farm exits, hauling eats your marginHeifer pipeline at 1978 lows — you can't buy your way out of thin corridorsScale, pivot, or exit: which path fits your debt-to-asset and Clock rowSix checks to run before your lender's next reviewThe 16-state Clock table shows California and Missouri accelerating — even Green Zones aren't safe. AFBF's Daniel Munch pegs Q1 pool losses at $337 million. Run your cwt × 85–93¢ before your route thins further. Full article with tables at thebullvine.com. Full article and sources: https://www.thebullvine.com/dairy-markets/the-new-fmmo-rule-costs-a-500-cow-dairy-97750-a-year-before-a-mile-of-freight/ Subscribe for straight-talking dairy analysis. Share this with a producer who needs it.

    33 min
  4. E540 Holstein Canada’s Governance Rewrite Passed. 0.8% of Members Voted.

    4D AGO

    E540 Holstein Canada’s Governance Rewrite Passed. 0.8% of Members Voted.

    On April 18, 2026, sixty-five out of 7,900 Holstein Canada members rewrote 141 years of dairy democracy. Three of the four biggest by-law clauses passed with zero floor debate. The Bullvine Podcast walks you through the Holstein Canada AGM that almost nobody noticed — and the four clauses that now shape the breed's future in this country. A 0.8% turnout adopted Section 4.15, making future member resolutions non-binding on the board. Section 2.05 handed the board unlimited borrowing authority with no cap. Section 2.09 gave them sole discretion over election, discipline, and director-conduct policy. Section 5.05 allows up to two voting directors to be appointed rather than elected. What you'll learn • Why a reported $1.01M surplus is actually a $350K operational deficit • The 5,000-classification drop behind a budget that assumes 10,000 more • How Resolution 5's 85% robotic-milking mandate got zero follow-through • What the 2025 accountability resolutions never got reported on • Why the Young Leader program quietly aged its upper limit to 35 • The branch-level move that could still reverse the April 18 vote CEO Greg Dietrich told members directly: "Our truer position is actually closer to a bit of a deficit." That honesty is rare. What is not rare is a board asking members to approve a 141-year governance rewrite in a ballroom almost nobody filled. Holstein Canada isn't being taken over. It's being left. And under the new by-laws, the board is no longer bound to act on the resolutions members did pass — including the 85% mandate on getting robotic-sensor data accepted as official milk-recording data, the single file that decides whether Holstein Canada still matters by 2035. Full article and sources: https://www.thebullvine.com/breed-association-news/holstein-canadas-governance-rewrite-passed-0-8-of-members-voted/ Subscribe for straight-talking dairy analysis. Share this with a producer who needs it.

    26 min
  5. E539 Your Handshake Succession Plan Is Worth $31,700. Ask the Metskes.

    5D AGO

    E539 Your Handshake Succession Plan Is Worth $31,700. Ask the Metskes.

    A trial judge gave the Metske family $405,000 for six years on their dairy. Ontario's Court of Appeal slashed it to $31,700. That's what a handshake is worth when property rights hit a judge — and the same trap waits in your paperwork. This episode breaks down the Metske v. Metske 2025 ONCA 418 ruling, where informal assurances failed proprietary estoppel tests. Hear how bank documents, undefined "favorable terms," and an "agreement to agree" left Tim and Amanda with just $33,700 in farm upgrades minus $2,000 damage. Get the seven legal documents that make succession enforceable, plus probate math on a $5M Wisconsin dairy and the 66-month Medicaid penalty from a $700K family-discount land deal. Why courts ignore sweat equity without a buy-sell formulaThe probate hit on a $5M dairy: $305K–$390K before taxesHow Medicaid's 60-month look-back turns land gifts into $707K billsYour 30-day action: pull deeds and match names to your family storyFour paths forward — with trade-offs for on-farm vs. off-farm heirsThe $373,300 gap between kitchen-table plans and courtroom realitySuccession isn't a family chat — it's the biggest asset transfer you'll ever do, and Metske proves handshakes lose. On a $5M operation, probate eats 6–8% while a $10K–$25K legal package covers the seven must-haves: deeds, LLC agreement, buy-sell, revocable trust, POAs, healthcare directive, Medicaid plan. Wisconsin DHS memo 25-20 pegs the daily divestment divisor at $352.06 — miss the timing and a "family deal" becomes a 66-month nursing-home penalty at $10,708/month. If your paperwork wouldn't hold up solo, pull it this week. dairy podcast, farm succession, dairy succession planning, farm probate costs, Medicaid look-back dairy, proprietary estoppel farm, dairy family disputes, buy-sell agreement dairy, revocable trust farm, dairy generational transfer, Ontario dairy court case, Wisconsin probate dairy, Metske v Metske, dairy handshake deals, ag law dairy Full article and sources: https://www.thebullvine.com/management/your-handshake-succession-plan-is-worth-31700-ask-the-metskes/ Subscribe for straight-talking dairy analysis. Share this with a producer who needs it.

    34 min
  6. E538 Quebec Spring Holstein Show 2026

    APR 16

    E538 Quebec Spring Holstein Show 2026

    A Five-Year-Old cow walks into the Grand Champion callout at Quebec Spring Show 2026. Behind her: a pedigree that traces through Sidekick, Crushtime, and Cindadoor all the way back to Loyalyn Goldwyn June — one of the most influential brood cows in Canadian Holstein history. Across the ring, a single farm holds Junior Champion, Intermediate Champion, and Reserve Grand Champion — all bred and owned. A quiet showman from Montmagny stands behind the Grand Champion and the Honorable Mention Grand, running cattle through multiple partnerships with multiple sire lines, placing in every mature division. One judge. One day. Three programs colliding at the top of the deepest show Victoriaville may have ever seen. This is the episode that will change how you think about what it takes to build a cow — and a program — that wins when it matters most. The Story You'll Hear: The moment Pat Lundy pointed to the Five-Year-Olds over the mature cows — and why the Grand Champion callout wasn't even closeA cow two weeks fresh who won Best Udder in her class but couldn't beat two Junior Three-Year-Olds for Intermediate Champion — and what that tells you about what judges are really rewarding right nowHow Ferme Jacobs collected three championship banners in one day with cattle spanning Fall Two-Year-Olds to EX-92 mature cows — and why "bred and owned" is the part that mattersThe showman nobody's talking about on social media who's been in Grand Champion contention at this show for three consecutive yearsWhy Lambda daughters went 1-2-3 in the Four-Year-Old class — and what a smaller operation from Saint-Christophe-d'Arthabaska proved about competing against the powerhousesThe breeding decision made four generations ago that built the cow who won it allWhy This Story Matters: Quebec Spring 2026 wasn't a show with one dominant cow. It was a show with three dominant programs — each winning in completely different ways. Ferme Jacobs proved that depth across every age group is the product of a system, not a lucky mating. Pierre Boulet showed that consistency, partnerships, and stockmanship can place you in the Grand Champion conversation year after year without ever needing the biggest herd or the loudest social media presence. And Ferme Fortale reminded everyone that a mid-size bred-and-owned operation can take Best Udder against the biggest names in the province. The sire stories are just as revealing: Lambda's daughters hold up through multiple lactations, Sidekick's stamp dominates the mature ring, and Ambrose is starting to validate what the genomics promised. Whether you're making matings this spring, prepping for fall shows, or just trying to figure out where the breed is heading — this show gave you answers. Jacuzzi's Grand Championship traces back through four generations of deliberate mating decisions. Most of us can name the sire we're using today. How many of us are building the cow family that wins four generations from now? The complete show report — every class, every championship, judge's reasons, and the breeding analysis behind the results — is live at https://www.thebullvine.com/show-reports/quebec-spring-holstein-show-2026/ Subscribe to The Bullvine Podcast so you never miss an episode. And if your cow, your farm, or your program has a story worth telling — reach out. We're always looking for the next conversation that reminds people why they got into this industry. Find us at thebullvine.com or connect on Facebook and Instagram.

    40 min
  7. E537 $368 Insurance, −$1,830 from Farming: What Actually Keeps One Iowa Dairy Alive

    APR 15

    E537 $368 Insurance, −$1,830 from Farming: What Actually Keeps One Iowa Dairy Alive

    USDA says the median U.S. farm household lost $1,830 farming in 2024 — and earned $86,900 off the farm. When enhanced ACA subsidies expired in December 2025, families like Meghan Palmer's in northeastern Iowa watched their monthly health insurance bill nearly double, exposing a financial reality the dairy industry rarely talks about openly: on most operations, the spouse's town job isn't supplemental income. It's the operating margin. This episode breaks down the barn math, the governance gap, and four concrete decision paths every dual-income dairy household should evaluate now. KEY TAKEAWAYS Why USDA's 2024 farm household income data ($102,748 median total — but negative $1,830 from farming) should change how you think about your farm's real financial structure.The hidden math behind a $55,000 off-farm salary: how employer health insurance, retirement matches, and benefits push total compensation to $65,000–$77,000 — and why that number often exceeds your net farm income.What a 200-cow herd shipping 75 lbs/day at $20.50/cwt actually nets after costs run $23.56/cwt — and where the off-farm paycheck fits in that equation.The governance gap: why the person funding your dairy's real margin probably isn't on your loan documents, bank accounts, or succession plan — and what that means if they get hurt, burn out, or leave.How ACA premium hikes (114% projected increase per KFF) and a 40%+ uninsured rate among dairy farmers are compounding an already razor-thin margin environment.Four decision paths — from formalizing the town job in your business plan to planning an intentional exit — with a 30-day action you can take with last year's tax return and a W-2.This episode puts real numbers behind something most dairy families live but never quantify. Using USDA Economic Research Service data, KFF Health News reporting, and Bullvine analysis, the discussion walks through what a spouse's off-farm job actually contributes — not just the paycheck, but the $7,500 to $19,300 in annual employer health insurance contributions, the retirement match, and the stability that no milk check can replicate. The conversation goes beyond economics into farm governance: if your operation depends on a single off-farm income stream, is the person generating it actually part of your business structure? For most dairy families, the answer is no — and that's a concentration risk nobody's managing. You'll hear the real story of Meghan Palmer, a registered nurse on a northeastern Iowa dairy whose $368 monthly insurance bill became the catalyst for rethinking her family's entire financial structure. Her experience, sourced from KFF Health News, mirrors what thousands of dairy households are navigating right now as ACA subsidy loss collides with production costs that averaged $23.56/cwt in 2024. Whether you're running 80 cows or 800, this episode gives you a framework to answer one question: does your farm's business plan actually account for the income that's keeping it alive? The full article — with sourced data, a side-by-side comparison table, and all four decision paths — is available at https://www.thebullvine.com/news/368-insurance-%E2%88%921830-from-farming-what-actually-keeps-one-iowa-dairy-alive/. Subscribe to The Bullvine Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen — and sign up for The Bullvine Weekly newsletter at thebullvine.com for upcoming economics features on production-cost breakevens by herd size and region.

    46 min
  8. E536 How a $286 Milk Replacer Shortcut Cost One 600‑Cow Herd $30,000 in Future Milk

    APR 14

    E536 How a $286 Milk Replacer Shortcut Cost One 600‑Cow Herd $30,000 in Future Milk

    Opening Summary: Every bag of milk replacer is a capital bet on your replacements—but most herds treat it like a commodity line item. This episode exposes how one 600-cow Wisconsin herd's switch to a cheaper plant-protein 20/20 replacer "saved" $286 per calf, only to lose over $30,000 in lifetime milk and delayed freshenings. Grounded in Cornell's ADG-to-milk research and Iowa State's 2024 heifer budgets, we challenge the least-cost formulation mindset and reveal the simple barn math that turns replacer decisions into profitability levers. Key Takeaways: How preweaning ADG of 0.65 vs. 0.85 kg/day translates to 456 kg more milk over three lactations—and $219 per heifer in value.Why plant proteins under week 3 drop ileal digestibility from 82% to 62%, spiking scours and capping genetic potential.The three-part ROI stack: lifetime milk + days to first calving + survival risk that makes "cheap" replacer the most expensive cut.A 30-day ADG challenge: weigh calves at birth/weaning, tie to replacer lots, and benchmark against your genomics.Cost-per-pound-of-gain vs. cost-per-bag: how higher-plane programs often lower true investment per kg of growth.Conventional wisdom says shave the replacer bill to trim heifer costs—but Iowa State's $2,258–$2,651 per-head budgets and Fodor's analysis of 35,128 Holsteins prove slow starters cost more in culling and delayed payback. We dissect Soberon & Van Amburgh's landmark 2012 JDS study (1,244 Cornell + 624 commercial heifers) showing 850–1,113 kg first-lactation milk per kg/day preweaning ADG, scaling to 2,280 kg over three lactations for survivors. UK on-farm data from 11 herds and soy digestibility trials reveal why all-milk under three weeks isn't optional. Get the barn math for your operation, including a conservative model netting near-zero before survival benefits, and practical paths to shift lenders from "cut costs" to "optimize ROI." This isn't theory—it's the data to reframe your next nutritionist or banker meeting. Run your own numbers with our Milk Replacer ROI Calculator and full breakdown at https://www.thebullvine.com/management/how-a-286-milk-replacer-shortcut-cost-one-600%e2%80%91cow-herd-30000-in-future-milk/ Subscribe for weekly genetics, economics, and management edges. Share your ADG results or lender stories on Twitter @TheBullvine—let's build better herds together.

    35 min

Ratings & Reviews

4
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Welcome to the official podcast of The Bullvine, where we dive deep into the world of dairy farming and the people behind the scenes. Each episode is crafted to serve your passion for dairy excellence, bringing you the latest updates, expert interviews, and inspiring success stories from the industry. Whether you're a seasoned farmer, a genetics enthusiast, or simply curious about the dairy sector, our podcast promises to keep you informed and engaged with its firsthand knowledge and relevant insights. Join us in revolutionizing dairy farming, one story at a time!

You Might Also Like