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Since owning cattle involves a relatively high capital investment, many cow-calf enterprises are carried out jointly by two or more people. One party may own the breeding herd while another party supplies the labor to take care of them.
You should be able to keep between 0.5 and 1.1 cows per acre on average pasture. In general, rotational grazing may increase the cows-per-acre rate up to 30% compared to traditional grazing.
A cattle share lease is one way to reduce an operator's capital needs. Typically, these leases provide the person caring for the cattle (operator) and the cow herd owner with a share of the revenue from the calf-crop sale in proportion to the expenses each person contributes.
A herd share, also known as a farm share, cow share, goat share, etc., is where people buy shares of a milking animal or herd, and pay the farmer to care for the animals and milk them. As owners, the shareholders are entitled to the milk from their animals.
Five species of wild cattle have been domesticated approximately in the last 10500 years (Helmer et al. 2005). This domestication process has provided many benefits to humans, from meat and milk, to draught animals (see also Chapter 3 in my book for more details).