The probate filing for the estate of my grandfather, Daniel Ulvog, provides a lot of information about the farm. Let’s look at indicators of the price of farm animals. The filling provides a number of data points.
Here is the listed information sorted by animal with a mean (weighted average), mode (price with largest number of animals), and my point estimate of the price of different animals.
Cows:
Sales:
- $132.07 – 19 head
Purchases:
- $50.00 – “1 cow”; oddly low price suggests this was not a mature cow
- $43.74 – “one cow”; again, this does not appear to be mature cow
Appraised value:
- $30.00 – 25 calves,
A calf is under 1 year of age. A yearling is between 1 and 2 years old. (The distinction is something this city boy had to look up.)
The $30 price is mentioned as calves. The $50.00 and $43.74 proceed appear to be yearlings. This leaves $132.07 as the sole indicator of mature cow prices, which is a good indicator since there were 19 head sold at the time.
Estimate of prices
So, I will use these prices:
- $132 – cow
- $47 – yearling (average of two data points)
- $30 – calf
Mixture of ages:
Purchase:
- $167.50 – one cow and one calf
This price now makes sense and supports the above prices. One cow at $132 plus a calf at $30 would be $162, which is close to the purchase price of $167.50.
Hogs:
Sales:
- $35.31 – 3 hogs
- $57.78 – 11 hogs
- $50.00 – sale of hogs without indication of number sold – assumed to be 2 based on prices
Inventory:
- $45.50 – 13 hogs at appraised value
Estimates of prices
Calculated prices:
- $49.41 – mean (weighted average)
- $45.50 – mode (data point with largest number of animals)
- $51.12 – mean of two largest data points
The $35.31 price seems to be an outlier, possibly because those 3 animals were smaller or younger. Thus I will use mean of two larger items, which is:
- $51 – hog
Recap
I will use these prices for animals:
- $132 – cow
- $47 – yearling
- $30 – calf
- $51 – hog