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<blockquote data-quote="dun" data-source="post: 36159" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>I just don't get this post. If you had raised cattle your entire life and were forced to quit, what kind of favor is it to have to get a factory/office/whatever else job? A living can be made on public land, but not the fortune that some people think because of that "free" grazing. In many parts of the west to "private land ranch" you can't make a living, or afford to buy land if any is available and still hope to make it. We've done them both ways and the main difference is in the managment, or what you manage. In the range type areas you're managing the cattle more, in private land your managing grass more. You probably put in just as much work and time for either, just a different form of labor.</p><p>This whole thread reminds me of the cows being kept in the barn post that people railed against. Of course in Europe where the cows were it's a completly different way of doing things.</p><p></p><p>dun</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dun, post: 36159, member: 34"] I just don't get this post. If you had raised cattle your entire life and were forced to quit, what kind of favor is it to have to get a factory/office/whatever else job? A living can be made on public land, but not the fortune that some people think because of that "free" grazing. In many parts of the west to "private land ranch" you can't make a living, or afford to buy land if any is available and still hope to make it. We've done them both ways and the main difference is in the managment, or what you manage. In the range type areas you're managing the cattle more, in private land your managing grass more. You probably put in just as much work and time for either, just a different form of labor. This whole thread reminds me of the cows being kept in the barn post that people railed against. Of course in Europe where the cows were it's a completly different way of doing things. dun [/QUOTE]
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