Roche Cattle 9th Annual Bull Sale

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It’s with great pleasure, anticipation and relief I present to you the 9th Annual Roche Cattle Bull Sale. It is a lot of work to put on a sale and I can’t help but first thank the Badiola family. They have been so gracious in hosting the event. I realize this format of a sale is new for our area but I feel like this is the future of cattle sales, it is easier on both the staff and the cattle. Plus, we can enjoy the sale inside a stunning facility.

I feel the cattle we have brought to town represent our program with class and a ton of mass. We make our living in the commercial cow world so WE KNOW what it takes to make ends meet in this difficult profession. We have run cattle in the toughest Nevada desert to the prettiest, elevated meadow. All situations are different and we all have what we prefer. That being said, I feel these bulls can improve any commercial cowherd. They are bred with a functional female and stout commercial steer in mind. Some producers chase numbers (EPDs), while some chase looks. We work to keep an even balance between the two. If I have to work with cattle every day, I want them to be attractive! That being said, they also have to pay the bills, so they must be functional. These bulls are exactly both. I will put our feeder cattle up against anyone in terms of performance and eye appeal. Cattle buyers like good looking rigs and better looking cattle.

The Simmental influenced bulls are what every cow/calf guy should be using. We are mostly Angus based cowherds in the west and when Simmental genetics are introduced, one will be amazed with the change. Calves will be heavier in the fall due to hybrid vigor, but not from an increase in frame. It is usually an increase in actual thickness of the cattle. The females will greatly improve the longevity in the herd as well as the reproductive consistency when crossbred. The Angus bulls in the offering represent exactly what I want to see in an Angus. They are loaded with power and break the stereotypical mold of not having anything to them. There is also a group of Angus bulls offered that will be great heifer bull candidates, and not just because of an EPD. They were low birth weight calves and are made to come out. One must look at the phenotype and EPDs. In my opinion, they are from proven bulls and great females.

Thanks again for taking to time to sort these bulls. I truly appreciate the interest and please feel free to call whenever with any questions or to just talk cattle!

SALE DAY PHONES:

Trevor Roche.............................................................208.880.7676

LaMar Roche.............................................................208.250.5575

SALE STAFF:

Trent Stewart.......................Auctioneer…................541.325.3662

Kyle Colyer…............................................................208.250.3924

Mark Frisbey..........................................................208.890.4517

CONSULTANTS:

Jonas Flake...............................................................775.385.0187

Brian Bott.................................................................208.431.1234

Dr. Travis Allen...........................................................208.989.7830

Carey Hawkins..........................................................208.724.6712

Justin Roche.............................................................435.327.1842

Nate Gillam...............................................................208.741.0685

Cody Wayment.........................................................801.458.5813

JB Salutregui.............................................................541.212.3278

Doug Mikelson.........................................................208.880.0834

Bobby Lax.................................................................208.739.6119

SALE LOCATION & DETAILS:

Badiola Arena • 402 US Hwy 95 • Homedale, ID 83628

The bulls and heifers will be on display in the pens behind Badiola Arena. The actual action will be held inside “The Tango” restaurant located in front of the arena next to the entrance. No animals will enter a ring, instead, each animal will be individually videoed and sale in catalog order on big screen TVs. If you have any questions how the sale will operate please feel free to call.

DINNER:

A ribeye steak dinner will be offered for all of those in attendance sale day. Please come early because the sale will start promptly at 4 PM.

ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Announcements from the auction block will take precedence over any printed matter.

BIDDING:

If you are unable to be present, contact one of the sale consultants to place a bid, or bid over Superior Click To Bid:

LIABILITY:

All persons attending this sale do so at their own risk, legal or otherwise, for their safety or the behavior of the animals. The owners, auction service and sale staff assume no liability for property loss or any accidents that may occur.

TRUCKING & DELIVERY:

Free delivery, nationwide, on all bulls selling for over $3,500. We have sold cattle to 25 states the past few years and have many options in assisting with transportation. Please don’t allow distance to keep you from bidding. We have always been able to find a ride and will guarantee no more then $300 a head to central points throughout the United States.

GUARANTEE:

Every bull comes with a 100% first breeding season guarantee. If any problems present themselves please call ASAP. We don’t have a fancy equation or program. We will just try to make you happy!

REGISTRATIONS:

Bulls selling for $4,000+ will be registered free of charge. A $50 registration fee will apply to any bulls selling for less than that. Papers will be furnished upon all bulls selling if requested by the buyer within 3 weeks. Leave a name, address and member association number with the sale staff at the conclusion of the sale. For papers requested after 3 weeks an additional charge may apply.

As many people know I am not the biggest believer in EPDs. I have seen them proven wrong and pointless countless times when raising and marketing livestock. When’s the last time a local auction was stopped to talk about the $B or YW EPD of the calves being sold? Far too often we as producers buy into the propaganda as we strive to improve the product we are producing and increase our bottom line. There is absolutely nothing wrong with always seeking improvement, but when that improvement is based on unproven data, we begin to chase a mirage. With the increased focus on genomics and DNA testing, the amount of data can become overwhelming. I can see it perpetuated from all breed associations with new EPDs and inflated numbers. I was about to jump into the top 1% EPD profiled cattle. I traveled across the Midwest visiting the ultra-progressive herds right when the CRAZY numbers we starting to be seen. I was searching for a few donors to bring this new concept west, and mass produce them in a hurry. I found myself at a farm in Wisconsin looking at a set of females with the ridiculously high EPDS and $B values. I wanted to like the cattle so bad, and take the west by storm, but as I was walking through the cattle, I realized the stock was no different than what I had at home. They weren’t lunkers or dinks, just common Angus that read amazing on paper. I left disgusted confused and returned to Idaho trying to figure what to do with EPDs and data.

I have always believed heterosis, at any level, can beat EPDs, but I could not find a study to support either side of the argument. The opportunity for clarity came when my dad decided to sell his commercial cows. I thought no better way to put EPDs and my philosophy to the test then with actual cattle in a real-world environment entirely based on actual PROFIT

I purchased 300 3-7-year-old cows and split them right down the middle. 150 cows were bred to my Simmental yearling bulls that didn’t quite pass semen test for the bull sale. The other 150 cows were bred to Angus bulls I purchased with the very best EPD profiles you can find. They were top 5% for WW and YW, as well as $C, $B and $F. Both groups wintered and calved together on cornstalks, summered in Donnelly, Idaho, and weaned the same day. EID tags were placed in each calf at birth. Individual birth weights and weaning weight were taken on each calf. A load of each group (2/3 steers, 1/3 heifers) were fed out in Wisner, Nebraska, to avoid any bias data. The results speak for themselves.

ANGUS

CROSSBRED SIRED CALVES OUTPERFORMED THE ANGUS BY 10%

After feeding the cattle out and getting back the kill data from my commercial experiment I don’t believe EPDs can outperform heterosis, and the numbers don’t lie. The crossbred calves WEANED, CONVERTED and GAINED over 10% better than the Angus. I believe heterosis from a plethora of continental breeds would show the same dominance in the pasture and feedlot. I’m not anti-Angus! I’m just saying the current EPD profiles paint a picture that can easily be crushed by crossbreeding. I have always heard heterosis is a free lunch, now I know that statement is true. Moral of the story for the commercial cattleman, crossbreed until the EPDs can beat divine design. The dairy breeds have figured out genomics and EPDs. I truly believe someday the beef producers will do the same, but that day is not today!

And don’t forget a crossbred cow will run much longer than any purebred. LONGEVITY is one of the most profitable characteristics that nobody talks about when building a cowherd.

OMF HARD RIGHT H21

Purebred Simmental • ASA: 3790968

OMF Epic E27 x MCM Top Grade 018X

BW: 1.7 • WW: 84.3 • YW: 123.3 • Milk: 27.8

Purebred Simmental • ASA: 3485371 Profit x MR TR Hammer 308A ET

4.8 • WW: 83.6 • YW: 121.9 • Milk: 19.6

Purebred Simmental • ASA: 3958195

VCL Foresight x MR NLC Upgrade U8676 BW: 4.1 • WW: 80.4 • YW: 112.2 • Milk: 19.1 STCC TECUMSEH 058J

OMF EPIC E27

Purebred Simmental • ASA: 3317371 WS All-Around Z35 x OMF Commander Y69

WFH/JS/CCS DOUBLE UP G365

Purebred Simmental • ASA: 3658592

W/C Double Down 5014E x CCR Wide Range 9005A

1.4 • WW: 84.9 • YW: 107.7 • Milk: 21.8

THSF LOVER BOY B33

Purebred Simmental • ASA: 2983443

HTP/SVF Duracell T52 x SVF/NJC Built Right N48 BW: 0.0 • WW: 84.7 • YW: 120.9 • Milk: 29.9

Purebred Simmental • ASA: 3957394 SO Remedy 7F x 4/B Miss Pilgrim 81B

2.7 • WW: 83.1 • YW: 122.9 • Milk: 18.1

Purebred Simmental • ASA: 3282185 WBF Significant B132 x HTP SVF In Dew Time

2.7 • WW: 86.0 • YW: 132.8 • Milk: 29.8 RUBY’S CURRENCY 7134E

Andras Fusion R236 x WEBR TC Card Shark 1015 BW: -3.3 • WW: 45 • YW: 70 • Milk: 26 TFG FIREMAN 329

Purebred Red Angus • RAAA: 4150466

EC REBEL 156F
4/B DYNAMO

CE (Calving Ease Direct) predicts average difference in ease with which a sire’s calves will be born when he is bred to first-calf heifers.

BW (Birth Weight) is a predictor of progeny birth weight attributed to its progeny.

WW (Weaning Weight) & YW (Yearling Weight) are predictors of the animal’s ability to transmit weaning growth and yearling growth to its progeny.

ADG (Average Daily Gain) can be defined as the average amount of weight a market animal will gain each day during the feeding period.

MCE (Maternal Calving Ease) indicates how easily a sire’s daughters will calve at 2 years of age when compared to the daughters of other sires.

Milk is a predictor of an animal’s genetic merit for milk and mothering ability.

MWW (Maternal Weaning Weight) is a measure of how much a cow’s milk production and genetics contribute to the weaning weight of her daughters. Higher MWW values are more favorable.

STAY (Stayability) predicts the probability of a bull’s daughters staying in production to at least six years of age compared to daughters of another bull. Reported as a percentage, a higher value is desirable.

Roche Epic 404

DOB: 2/10/24

Birth Weight (actual)

Weaning Weight (actual)

365 Day Weight - Sale Day Weight

GAIN - Pounds gained per day on test.

Purebred Simmental

DOC (Docility)

is expressed as a difference in yearling cattle temperament, with a higher value indicating more favorable docility. It predicts the average difference of progeny from a sire in comparison with another sire’s calves.

CW (Carcass Weight)

predicts the difference in hot carcass weight of a bull’s progeny compared to progeny of all other bulls evaluated at a given endpoint. Reported in pounds, a higher number is generally desirable.

MARB (Marbling)

expressed in square inches, is a predictor of the difference in ribeye area of a sire’s progeny compared to progeny of other sires.

YG (Yield Grade)

a prediction of the difference in USDA Yield Grade between a sire’s offspring and another sire’s offspring. It is reported in tenths of a USDA YG, with lower numbers being more desirable.

BF (Back Fat) expressed in inches of backfat.

REA (Ribeye Area)

estimates the difference in ribeye area between a bull’s progeny and another bull’s progeny.

API (All-Purpose Index)

expressed in net dollars returned per cow exposed, evaluates Simmental sires being used on the entire cowherd (bred to both Angus first-calf heifers and mature cows) with a portion of the daughters retained for breeding and the steers and remaining heifers fed and sold on a carcass grade and yield basis.

TI (Terminal Index)

expressed in net dollars returned per cow exposed, evaluates the merit of sires when bred to mature Angus cows and all progeny are fed and sold on a carcass grade and yield basis. Consequently, maternal traits such as milk, stayability and MCE are not considered in this index.

It does not matter if you are selling your calves at weaning, as yearlings or retaining ownership through the feedlot; you cannot afford to give up the advantages that hybrid vigor will convey to your bottom line.

Today’s industry demands an animal that can gain, grow and grade. Simmental composite cattle posses the true genetic potential feedlots are searching for while improving the longevity and total production of the base cowherd through heterosis.

After years of advanced genetic evaluation, a commitment to research and consistent breed improvement, Simmental and Simmental Genetics are poised in the position as the most logical and profitable choice for the Continental genetic component for profit driven crossbreeding programs. No other Continental option generates the combination of growth, carcass value, calving ease, maternal and efficiency traits that Simmental does. Some provide comparable terminal value, others bring some wonderful maternal traits to the table, but Simmental Genetics offer both. In fact, they rank first or second in almost every economically important trait category listed in the latest MARC data. So whether you choose Simmental genetics to complement British breed commercial females or one of the popular Simmental Genetic composite options like SimAngus to preserve a balance of Continental and British genetics and retain heterosis in your herd, you can be confident you are using all of the facts available to make the most logical genetic choice possible.

The Goal: Produce for the Market

According to Tom Brink of Five Rivers Ranch Cattle Feeding, LLC., Five Rivers first choice in feeders is the Angus /Continental cross, 50% to 75% Angus and 25% to 50% Continental. This blend of Angus and Continental cattle “creates a good feeding, good grading, good yielding animal that is usually the right size.”

Maternal sib to Lot 2 sold to Ohio in 2025

Roche Dynamo 438

Roche Epic 420

• The first of many great half blood bulls from the Colyer Angus donors.

• Top 10% for BW EPD

• Top 30% for YW and API

Roche Epic 414

Roche Remedy 415

Roche Remedy 419

Paternal sib to Lot 20 sold to Iowa in 2025

“My SimAngus Roche bulls have held up well in

Roche Double Up 3192 29

• Great age advantage bull with an impeccable profile.

• Sired by the new sire, Double Up, for outcross genetics.

• Stout and big boned for added performance.

Roche Currency 3923 30

Roche Currency 360 31

• Long sided and powerful from behind.

• Out of a great Driver donor

• Full sib to numerous bulls we have offered.

Roche Rebel 3N

• One of the best baldies we have sold.

• Great profile with an amazing presence.

• Daughters will be big time producers.

Roche Rebel 3133

DOB: 3/24/23

Roche Rebel 3634T

Roche Double Up 361

• Tons of

Roche Double Up 366V

Roche Currency 382T

Roche Currency 3121

Roche 384B

Roche Double Up 430 49

• Very attractive, high growth, power bull in a moderate package.

• Dam is an up-and-coming future donor.

• One of the highest performers.

Roche Epic 407 50

DOB: 2/2/24

• Absolutely love everything about this bull!

• Great presence and profile.

• One of the most attractive in the offering.

• Soft made purebred with added look and style. Purebred Simmental

Roche Epic 409 51

Two years ago, I was looking to advance my SimAngus cattle for my commercial cattlemen clients. Longevity is a key factor when looking for avenues to increase profit. I was raised around the original Salers. They ran until they were 18 and could clear a Powder River gate standing flatfooted. The breed has greatly changed, in terms of hair coat, eye appeal, and temperament. I’m not going to say they are the answer for everyone, but for the guy looking to make a switch and greatly increase performance with longevity, lots 52-57 are a great option. Their sister mates will be offered next year as bred heifers. They are gorgeous!

Roche Bonaparte 4602G

Roche Bonaparte 4823

Roche Bonaparte 430S

Roche Bonaparte 437S

Roche Bonaparte 421S

Roche Bonaparte 408S

Roche Bonaparte 41474

Maternal

• One of the most balanced bulls in the offering.

• EPD profile with the most traits in the top 30%.

Dam is the Prolific Colyer donor that is doing a great job.

Roche Lover Boy 4601

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