For such a general question, it requires a general answer: It depends on the steer and the type of feed corn being used to feed that steer. There is some sort of general "rule of thumb" out there that it takes around 9 lbs of grain to get one pound of beef, but that is pretty ambiguous. It takes more pounds of corn to get a pound of gain on a Holstein steer than it would on an Angus steer, for instance. Also, cracked corn will get a steer to gain more weight than whole corn will.
This all depends on the kind of grain you are feeding that steer, since there are different levels of crude proteins, TDNs, ADF's, etc., that comes with different grains. And the acres of grass depends on where you live and how much forage biomass grows in that particular area. So all those factors that are missing in this question make it impossible to answer. Typically, though, it takes more pasture to raise one steer than it does to raise a steer on grain. But how much is unknown at this point.
A 1000 lb steer will eat 2.5% of his body weight. In other words, he will eat around 25 lbs of feed per day.
on a 1000 pound steer of exceptional quality you will get about 400-450 pounds of meat with about 150-170 pounds being steak.
That depends on how much you were getting paid initially. If, for example, you were getting paid $1000, two percent of that would be $1000*0.02 = $20. With the 2% raise, you would then be paid $1020.
His goal was to reach 1000 000 dollars
Approximately 55 million acres, but this can vary from year to year. Roughly another 35 million acres is used for corn to produce ethanol.
I think we have a rustler here and I want a 16 ounce prime rib out of this affair. Prime or Choice? I bid 650 pounds.
Eating meat doesn't raise blood sugar very much if at all. However, there may be other items in the making of the brisket that may raise it a little.
Each year the amount of corn produced is different due to various factors. In 2008, the US produced 307386.00 (1000 MT) of corn. Source: http://www.pecad.fas.usda.gov/cropexplorer/cropview/CommodityView.cfm
A good skid steer can cost around $15,000 to $18,000.
you can get up to $1000 dollars your first year and then each year you do detasseling then you get paid about $1 more per hour.