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<blockquote data-quote="hillsdown" data-source="post: 722159" data-attributes="member: 5106"><p>OT it is not me saying it it is the world saying it .The countries who only grass feed their cattle, which means they are on pasture 365 days a year. You all have come up with a fancy name to rename what we have been doing from day one , grazing our cattle and feeding them hay when they cannot graze. That is not "grass fed" that is just the way it has always been done and this bull shytt blanket statement that everyone here in north america feeds their cattle grain from day one needs to pull their heads out of their @sses because it is hard enough to break even feeding them just grass let alone grain too ,unless you have them on a specific finishing program and have the clientele that pay for it...</p><p></p><p>The next time I hear one more time that they are grass fed only I really will go certifiable, if you want to be grass fed only then you are on the wrong continent for it... Grass fed to the real world means grazing the native land only ,that is it, no cut and rolled hay fed and no silage and certainly no additives like some of your folks favorite " turkey litter ".</p><p></p><p>You all are letting south american beef dictate what we market already and we still produce a better product, our cattle are not "grass fed" they are forage fed their is a difference.</p><p></p><p>I raise forage cattle not grass cattle as my cattle get alfalfa too and I thought that was not considered a grass.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hillsdown, post: 722159, member: 5106"] OT it is not me saying it it is the world saying it .The countries who only grass feed their cattle, which means they are on pasture 365 days a year. You all have come up with a fancy name to rename what we have been doing from day one , grazing our cattle and feeding them hay when they cannot graze. That is not "grass fed" that is just the way it has always been done and this bull shytt blanket statement that everyone here in north america feeds their cattle grain from day one needs to pull their heads out of their @sses because it is hard enough to break even feeding them just grass let alone grain too ,unless you have them on a specific finishing program and have the clientele that pay for it... The next time I hear one more time that they are grass fed only I really will go certifiable, if you want to be grass fed only then you are on the wrong continent for it... Grass fed to the real world means grazing the native land only ,that is it, no cut and rolled hay fed and no silage and certainly no additives like some of your folks favorite " turkey litter ". You all are letting south american beef dictate what we market already and we still produce a better product, our cattle are not "grass fed" they are forage fed their is a difference. I raise forage cattle not grass cattle as my cattle get alfalfa too and I thought that was not considered a grass. [/QUOTE]
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