Lay's Ranch

Lay's Ranch Family ranch that is established in raising healthy animals from birth to table. Thus leading us to creating the business of Lay's Ranch.

We've raised many farm animals over our lifetime, and in 2012 we bought a milk cow and put three calves on her to raise for butcher for our family. We loved the taste of the homegrown meat so much that we ate more beef than normal. By sharing our beef with family, friends, and co-workers, word spread so fast that we had an order for ten steers the following year and we were turning people away for

lack of enough steers. We enjoy the life of taking care of animals. Keeping them healthy and raising them as God intended; food for His people.

Here is another balloon reminder. I will share this every time. I had to yell at this heifer calf to drop the string of ...
12/16/2023

Here is another balloon reminder. I will share this every time.
I had to yell at this heifer calf to drop the string of this balloon out of her mouth.
They are inquisitive and explore everything with their mouths. Which can lead to serious injury or death. I’m not exaggerating. Balloons kill livestock.
-Check your balloons are secure. Times ten!!!
-Don’t do a balloon release for memorials. There are other options.
They can travel thousands of miles, so don’t think just because you are in the city it is safe.

05/28/2023

I haven’t made a post in quite some time as life has gotten busy around here. But I had to share my cute shadows for the day. Hope everyone is having a great Memorial Day weekend!

We love having breeds of livestock that work well together.
03/01/2023

We love having breeds of livestock that work well together.

Beef available for March butcher dates. -Custom cut order forms-Processing and vacuum packaging included in pricing-Deli...
02/22/2023

Beef available for March butcher dates.
-Custom cut order forms
-Processing and vacuum packaging included in pricing
-Delivery available for DFW area

Whole- $5.80/lb hanging weight
Half- $5.95/lb hanging weight
Quarter- $6.00/lb hanging weight

Please visit our page, website, or contact us for more information and ask about our practices raising animals from birth to butcher. No outside animals.

https://laysranch.godaddysites.com

02/14/2023

I have control of my account again!!! 100% full control!
I had my personal and business page stolen from me and now have it back.
Security measures have taken place with additional full control admins so as to never lose the business page again.
I have deleted the previous posts so as to not confuse anyone else that may see those and not this post. It’s so nice to be back!

We are starting to defrost here. Hope everyone made it through the cold ok. Looking forward to the 60-70s expected in a ...
02/02/2023

We are starting to defrost here. Hope everyone made it through the cold ok. Looking forward to the 60-70s expected in a few days!

-- Beef Available for March 2023 --Now that I have given a quick breakdown of what goes into raising animals to butcher ...
01/25/2023

-- Beef Available for March 2023 --

Now that I have given a quick breakdown of what goes into raising animals to butcher from a herd/ranch standpoint, I would like to go into more directly our ranch goals and direction with breeds and finishing for beef/pork.

Our breeding program for beef utilizes a variety of breeds for cows and we cover them with the Aberdeen Angus bulls. By having these 50% or more Aberdeen cattle genetics, means we can create a high quality and tasteful beef product for you. This breed is of smaller stature but not to be classified as a miniature. They are a gentle breed that is highly efficient for beef production. We have recently introduced a Hereford bull to add in some wonderful qualities in their genetics that they can produce before again switching back to an Aberdeen Angus bull.

We believe in being able to know where your beef comes from and how it is raised. We raise everything from birth to butcher out in pasture. We utilize a pasture rotation grazing system. This is healthier for the land and the cattle. It ensures our grasses grow strong, our ground doesn’t deteriorate, and the saying goes “to raise healthy cattle, one must raise healthy grass.” They are NEVER confined on a feedlot type of environment.

When we prepare them for butcher we separate those to be butchered and they get a whole pasture to themselves. We then supplement their pasture diet with grain for the last few months before butcher. I say supplement because we are not “Finishing” them on grain. They are finished on pasture and on grass. We give them just a small daily ration out in the pasture to balance the grass (some call “gamey”) flavor with the “grain” flavor that we are so accustomed to finding now in stores and restaurants. The cleanness and all natural flavors of grass finished beef is there but just a hint of sweetness to be more balanced. They are not fed so much that they pack on fat and that you lose the grass flavor completely. It is just an additive, supplement, to the grass. This combination creates exceptional flavor. All of this being said, if you desire to have strictly grass fed, grass finished, and no grain we can keep that steer separate and not receive any supplements.

Our animals are NEVER given any growth hormones. They are treated as humanely and stress free as possible. We avoid use of cattle prods and excessive harassment. Our cattle see us daily so that we can check on their health, keep them calm around us, and ensure none have succumbed to predators or sickness. I say all of this not because I’m a cow loving hippie, (though I do have some favorites, haha). I say this because, unknown to many, this all affects the flavor and tenderness of your beef. Having an animal be stressed – scared, angry – means that just like us humans, their muscles are going to contract/tighten to prepare for fight or flight. They are going to release adrenaline and other hormones, again in prepare for fight or flight. So by having cattle that are not stressed – scared, angry – means that the beef you receive is not going to by tough in texture and tainted in flavor.

We have an amazing butcher that we use that produces clean cuts, very accommodating to customers, and I am sure we get our own product back. If you order a half or a whole you get to fully customize your order which means, wrapping, steak sizes, roast sizes, ground beef, sausages, etc. Quarter orders have to be coordinated with the other quarter buyer to agree on cuts for dividing the half.

Whole beef: $5.80/lb hanging weight
Half beef: $5.95/lb hanging weight
Quarter beef: $6.00/lb hanging weight
(add on items have extra fee straight from butcher –, tenderizing, sausage, patties, etc)

We offer delivery in the Dallas-Fort Worth area with use of freezers and a generator to ensure it stays frozen from the butcher to you with no defrosts. We only charge our fuel for this service for vehicle and generator.

If you have any questions please let me know.

01/23/2023

We had some surprises for our girls when they came home from school the other day. Welcome these five little friends named: Snowy, Brownie, Cali, Missy, and Dude.

01/20/2023

Every morning I take the girls to school our boar Roy has to race the truck. ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀

I truly feel a passion in educating people about how to raise healthy animals and developing a quality product. I am all...
01/16/2023

I truly feel a passion in educating people about how to raise healthy animals and developing a quality product. I am all about being completely transparent in how I operate and learn how others operate as well. I will help you raise your own or help you find a different person that you can purchase from. I want you to be an informed buyer, regardless from whom you purchase from. I may not know everything, but I am willing to learn and share what I do know. Ask me questions, I love what I do and can talk forever! haha.
I want to take this time to give a fast (as fast as I can anyways) breakdown of costs/time involved to raise and animal to butcher.
First things first that everyone MUST understand is small farmers/ranchers are going to have higher operating costs than commercial producers, so that higher cost is going to be passed to the consumer. The saying goes that we buy everything at retail and sale at wholesale. (Imagine buying something from Walmart then selling it at sams club pricing.) We cannot buy in bulk at discounted prices the way commercial producers do. To feed out 1 steer alone it is going to take about 2000lbs of feed to reach butcher (if done correctly – some will feed less, others more.) As a small producer I can buy 40 bags of feed from a feed store, or a 1 ton tote from a feed mill. Yes, I get a discount going the tote route but a commercial producer buys Multiple tons per week/month, so they get an even greater discount. This applies towards EVERYTHING, vaccines, hay, fuel, butchering, and even the animals themselves sometimes.
Most people also don’t factor in the costs of the land purchase/rent, taxes, fencing, operating equipment – tractor, trailer, truck etc etc, working pens/equipment, etc etc. Then the cost/time involved with maintaining and repairing all of those items. Let us also factor in the time to raise that one steer. We have 9 months waiting for it to be born, then 2.5 years to reach butcher date.
Most years small farms and ranches operate in the red and just hope to break even. A few years we are blessed to work in the black.
So the question may be, why do we do it then? The answer is simple. We want people to be able to experience homegrown products that have not been warped to benefit the producer instead of the consumer. We are passionate about good stewardship for the land and animal. We love the lifestyle. We love the morals it teaches our children. It teaches compassion, respect, responsibility, patience, confidence, and a strong work ethic.
I don't say this to get sympathy or a pat on the back. It is said to raise awareness of all the hard work and passion one has to raise you that product you have.

01/14/2023

It’s a piggy pile!!!

I’ve had help the last few days to fix my chicken coop. In the middle of the pig pen we’ve had visits all day as we have worked. They finally decided we weren’t interesting anymore and decided to go soak up some sun in the chilly day.

Address

Rice, TX

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