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<blockquote data-quote="TxStateCowboy" data-source="post: 230122" data-attributes="member: 2989"><p>Its all meat on the inside. You can dabble with ears and hair color all you want, but remember the point of this industry is getting beef to the people that eat it, and little more. </p><p></p><p>As a cattle producer I believe quality and health of animal (regardless of color, ears, horns, and for commercial cattlemen breed) is the goal, but uniformity should be attempted on the weights, gains, quality and quantity of meat, and hardiness of your herd. Lasater understood what a cattleman's job was, and he developed a fine set of guidelines and an excellent "breed."</p><p></p><p>Only "pure breeders" need worry about the rest. What? Holstiens in my angus?? Brahma and Watusi in my longhorns? Semmi in my Limo? (that one was a joke)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TxStateCowboy, post: 230122, member: 2989"] Its all meat on the inside. You can dabble with ears and hair color all you want, but remember the point of this industry is getting beef to the people that eat it, and little more. As a cattle producer I believe quality and health of animal (regardless of color, ears, horns, and for commercial cattlemen breed) is the goal, but uniformity should be attempted on the weights, gains, quality and quantity of meat, and hardiness of your herd. Lasater understood what a cattleman's job was, and he developed a fine set of guidelines and an excellent "breed." Only "pure breeders" need worry about the rest. What? Holstiens in my angus?? Brahma and Watusi in my longhorns? Semmi in my Limo? (that one was a joke) [/QUOTE]
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