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Do your steers make the cut?
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<blockquote data-quote="gcreekrch" data-source="post: 1557516" data-attributes="member: 14161"><p>I am not telling you to change your program, I asked what was so wrong with your decades old herd that you changed it...….</p><p></p><p>I am busy enough to not need the extra burden of AI and ET, IMO, they are both extra expenditures for the end product. A bull supplier using other's genetics doesn't say much for their own herd unless they are just starting out. </p><p></p><p>If a bull is athletic enough and not overweight, he should be able to breed a cow of any size. I doubt your bull would weigh 2200 if he was in actual working condition. We have sold cull bulls weighing a ton many times. Would rather they stopped growing at 17 or 1800, they last longer that way in this rough country..</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="gcreekrch, post: 1557516, member: 14161"] I am not telling you to change your program, I asked what was so wrong with your decades old herd that you changed it...…. I am busy enough to not need the extra burden of AI and ET, IMO, they are both extra expenditures for the end product. A bull supplier using other's genetics doesn't say much for their own herd unless they are just starting out. If a bull is athletic enough and not overweight, he should be able to breed a cow of any size. I doubt your bull would weigh 2200 if he was in actual working condition. We have sold cull bulls weighing a ton many times. Would rather they stopped growing at 17 or 1800, they last longer that way in this rough country.. [/QUOTE]
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