Mt. Hope auctions livestock, hay and produce in Holmes County and has a big feeder calf sale, where young cattle mature enough to be fattened, coming up Sept. 29.
"You go back four, five, six years, those calves would bring $100 to $200 a piece," Mullet said, "and you now see them bringing anywhere from $900 up to $1,100 a piece for an on average a 90 to 100 pound Holstein calf."
What's caused this massive spike? Mainly a supply and demand problem, according to Kenny Rufener with Congress Lake Farms, a cattle farm in Mogadore.
"I think we're just behind the curve where you don't have enough animals out there, and that's driven the price up," he said. "Because there's not enough supply out there."
The supply of cattle has drastically decreased the past few years, largely due to drought conditions across the country, but the demand for beef has not let up, Rufener said. And replenishing the herd takes time.
"It's not like chickens or hogs where the turnaround is so fast," Rufener said.
It takes around three years for a cow to be sold as beef, he said, while a chicken's life cycle is a few months and a pig's is less than a year.
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