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Angus temperment
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<blockquote data-quote="dun" data-source="post: 769833" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>Discussed this with the vet the other evening when he stopped by. EXT gets a lot of press about bad temperment. Vet has had a number of them over the years including an EXT daughter and her EXT dauther and her EXT daughter. The third one left not because of diposition but because she was a tiny little thing that couldn;t raise a decent calf. Over the years he used EXT a lot and not on just that family. He maintanes that the EXT daughters are fine, but EXT grandaughters tend to be flighty. He has also noticed that our calves are much calmer then his after weaning. He thinks it's because his don;t adapt to change very well. Claims to have seen that in a number of other angus herds as well.</p><p>To me that not handling change sounds more like Brahman trait then angus. But since he sees thousands of them a year I accept his judgement.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dun, post: 769833, member: 34"] Discussed this with the vet the other evening when he stopped by. EXT gets a lot of press about bad temperment. Vet has had a number of them over the years including an EXT daughter and her EXT dauther and her EXT daughter. The third one left not because of diposition but because she was a tiny little thing that couldn;t raise a decent calf. Over the years he used EXT a lot and not on just that family. He maintanes that the EXT daughters are fine, but EXT grandaughters tend to be flighty. He has also noticed that our calves are much calmer then his after weaning. He thinks it's because his don;t adapt to change very well. Claims to have seen that in a number of other angus herds as well. To me that not handling change sounds more like Brahman trait then angus. But since he sees thousands of them a year I accept his judgement. [/QUOTE]
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