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Health & Nutrition
Feeding young bull
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<blockquote data-quote="Banjo" data-source="post: 980936" data-attributes="member: 17304"><p>I see you are a seedstock producer. I am a commercial cow/calf operator.....so we live in different worlds. If I got out of my cattle what you do then I might pamper them every chance i could also....maybe. So therefore a 1000# of grain is only a drop in the bucket so to speak. More power to you.</p><p>On the subject of maturity.....I don't AI here, like you do. Here, the bull is with the herd a large part of the time. I don't want my 5 and 6 hundred lb heifers getting bred, and if I didn't have a bull with them, the neighbors bull would jump the fence and do the job. I don't want them coming in heat before 15 mo. which would put them in sync with the rest of the herd and give them plenty of time to develop. </p><p>With you, TIME may be money, but with me ...management is money.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Banjo, post: 980936, member: 17304"] I see you are a seedstock producer. I am a commercial cow/calf operator.....so we live in different worlds. If I got out of my cattle what you do then I might pamper them every chance i could also....maybe. So therefore a 1000# of grain is only a drop in the bucket so to speak. More power to you. On the subject of maturity.....I don't AI here, like you do. Here, the bull is with the herd a large part of the time. I don't want my 5 and 6 hundred lb heifers getting bred, and if I didn't have a bull with them, the neighbors bull would jump the fence and do the job. I don't want them coming in heat before 15 mo. which would put them in sync with the rest of the herd and give them plenty of time to develop. With you, TIME may be money, but with me ...management is money. [/QUOTE]
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