Web Reporting System Documentation

Comprehensive Yard Sheet
Death Report
Closeout Summary
Receiving Report
Shipment Report
Cattle Valuation Report

Move your mouse over the sample report below to view an explanation of the report contents.


Your customer name. The home tab will transfer you to the Internet home page for the feedyard. The comprehensive yard sheet reports all cattle for the current customer sorted by feedyard, lot and pen. The report presents a complete status of lots with cattle remaining in them. The death report shows the details of any cattle which have died. It is sorted from earliest date to latest. The closeout summary contains a complete report of cattle which have been sold. The report contains the profit and loss figures. The information is displayed by sex and sorted by out date. The receivings report displays complete information on cattle receipts. You can enter specifications to control the data displayed. The report is sorted by date of receipt. The shipment report displays information about the lots shipped including financial summaries. You can control the ranges of data displayed. The report is in date order. The cattle valuation report displays information about all of your current lots. Expenses to date are displayed and the current market value of the cattle is reported. The report is in lot number order. The logout button is used to discontinue reporting for the current customer number. You can enter another customer number for reporting. This is primarily used by customers who have more than one customer number. Indicates that the current report can be downloaded into an Excel spreadsheet. You must have Excel installed on your computer to use this feature. The lot number as assigned by the feedyard. The pen number that the cattle were assigned to. The buyer of the cattle. The date of this shipping transaction. The reference number for this shipping transaction. The name of the lot as assigned by the feedyard. The cattle's origin. The number of cattle shipped in this transaction. The sex of the cattle. Days on feed. The number of days that the cattle were fed. The pay weight of the cattle. Pay weight is gross weight adjusted for shrink. The weight of the cattle when shipped from the feedyard. The average weight of the cattle as delivered to the buyer, with shrink. The average price per hundredweight paid by the buyer. The percentage body weight shrink (loss) for the cattle during transit. The freight cost of shipping the cattle. The net amount received for this shipment of cattle.