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Herf Bull Pic: Updated
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<blockquote data-quote="Brandonm22" data-source="post: 675895" data-attributes="member: 7645"><p>You would be wrong too. You can clearly make out the bulge of muscle that is his round, dittoe with the chuck, without an over the top shot preferably from behind I won't comment about the loin. "short coupled" is one of the most overused terms in livestock judging......I just don't see it here. "steep hipped" somebody has got to define that term for me. I don't know what you are talking about unless you want less slope between the hooks and the pins on both bulls in which case we are in serious disagreement. Yall are comparing too different types of Hereford here. I think I would rather have your bull's steers at the feedlot. They are growthier and according to the sire's carcass EPDs they will grade. That said, Knersie raises a deep chested, broody, early maturing, moderate framed, easy fleshing kind of Hereford that ought to produce easy keeping heifers that will holdup 12++ years under less than optimal conditions. I am not saying that Knersie's steers will be toads after 190 days in an American feedlot or that your bull's daughters will fall apart on pasture conditions just that his look more rugged and your look maybe more performance oriented. I don't know why this is worth arguing over.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brandonm22, post: 675895, member: 7645"] You would be wrong too. You can clearly make out the bulge of muscle that is his round, dittoe with the chuck, without an over the top shot preferably from behind I won't comment about the loin. "short coupled" is one of the most overused terms in livestock judging......I just don't see it here. "steep hipped" somebody has got to define that term for me. I don't know what you are talking about unless you want less slope between the hooks and the pins on both bulls in which case we are in serious disagreement. Yall are comparing too different types of Hereford here. I think I would rather have your bull's steers at the feedlot. They are growthier and according to the sire's carcass EPDs they will grade. That said, Knersie raises a deep chested, broody, early maturing, moderate framed, easy fleshing kind of Hereford that ought to produce easy keeping heifers that will holdup 12++ years under less than optimal conditions. I am not saying that Knersie's steers will be toads after 190 days in an American feedlot or that your bull's daughters will fall apart on pasture conditions just that his look more rugged and your look maybe more performance oriented. I don't know why this is worth arguing over. [/QUOTE]
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