
ALACOWMAN wrote:i thought they were slicker coated than that...


KNERSIE wrote:What does the cows look like, the bull didn't exactly stamp a type on these three calves

KNERSIE wrote:What does the cows look like, the bull didn't exactly stamp a type on these three calves

Dam of bull 2442
Dam of heifer 2042
Dam of bull 3342
KNERSIE wrote:Interesting, thanks

Galloway2 wrote:KNERSIE wrote:Interesting, thanks
Interesting good or bad?

KNERSIE wrote:Galloway2 wrote:KNERSIE wrote:Interesting, thanks
Interesting good or bad?
Interesting not quite what I had expected.


Stocker Steve wrote:The Galloway around here are mostly belted and on hobby places. I have picked up a few for the stocker herd in the past. They were extra hardy - - I can not remember every treating one - - but pretty average on growth. Since we bale graze I have wondered about how they would over winter.
Do you consider them a maternal breed for the northern F1 replacement, and if so what type do they nick best with?


ANAZAZI wrote:Good cattle, but bull pictures with lazy prepuces bother me.

Below the average for the growth? Well I must do something right as the calves out of our belted cattle were weaned at 600lbs in Oct.Galloway2 wrote:Stocker Steve wrote:The Galloway around here are mostly belted and on hobby places. I have picked up a few for the stocker herd in the past. They were extra hardy - - I can not remember every treating one - - but pretty average on growth. Since we bale graze I have wondered about how they would over winter.
Do you consider them a maternal breed for the northern F1 replacement, and if so what type do they nick best with?
The belteds and some of the multipliers do have average or below average growth cattle, as you said "Hobby" We have produced Galloway seedstock for over 30 years, selecting for maternal, easy keeping cattle with good carcasses. The Galloway breeeders did not breed out the characteristics that make the breed what it is. We did not open the herdbook and use other breeds to become something different. Thus the Galloway is a complete outcross to all other breeds.
The Galloways work great in bale grazing as well as standing forage during the winter. They will be out grazing when it is -20 and windy, while our Angus are huddled up behind the windbreaks looking for a free lunch.
ve not seen a Galloway cross that I havenI haven't liked. Hereford, Shorthorn, Simmy, Angus, Char, Limo, Gelb, Pieds, Brahma, Longhorn, Chi, Maine, Lowline I have seen good moderate framed long bodied, easy keeping females out of all of them.
I will have to admit, the Dexter and Highland crosses did not do much for me, though the calves were much better than the cows they came out of.

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