ENNOT":s4umrina said:I don't care what the situation is, get rid of them. The market has been good for too long to deal with that. That's why some herds are the way they are. ............."She's a real nice cow, and she's real nice when she calves, but the calves are always dead".
Get rid of her.
msscamp":3e6ia0ln said:ENNOT":3e6ia0ln said:I don't care what the situation is, get rid of them. The market has been good for too long to deal with that. That's why some herds are the way they are. ............."She's a real nice cow, and she's real nice when she calves, but the calves are always dead".
Get rid of her.
Oh, I see, thanks for clarifying this issue for me - the neighbor doesn't know diddly squat about ranching or bulls, he buys a vibrio infected bull from somewhere, the bull jumps/goes through the fence and your cow(s) contract vibrio and aborts - that's the cow's fault, though, because she didn't require him to wear a condom? Or how about you're a newbie and don't know the benefits of bangs vaccinating - one cow contracts brucellosis and proceeds to transmit it throughout your herd. I guess that is the cow's fault too, huh? How about this - you're a newbie and don't know how to feed your cows properly, resulting in them being underweight and having problems breeding back - I suppose that's the cows fault, too? I'm thinking you need to get a clue about raising cattle, what is the cow's fault and what is your fault - otherwise you're shooting yourself in the foot repeatedly and selling off potentially good genetics that could help your herd grow substantially! :roll: :roll: :roll:
WORANCH":vzi4e1h8 said:msscamp":vzi4e1h8 said:ENNOT":vzi4e1h8 said:I don't care what the situation is, get rid of them. The market has been good for too long to deal with that. That's why some herds are the way they are. ............."She's a real nice cow, and she's real nice when she calves, but the calves are always dead".
Get rid of her.
Oh, I see, thanks for clarifying this issue for me - the neighbor doesn't know diddly squat about ranching or bulls, he buys a vibrio infected bull from somewhere, the bull jumps/goes through the fence and your cow(s) contract vibrio and aborts - that's the cow's fault, though, because she didn't require him to wear a condom? Or how about you're a newbie and don't know the benefits of bangs vaccinating - one cow contracts brucellosis and proceeds to transmit it throughout your herd. I guess that is the cow's fault too, huh? How about this - you're a newbie and don't know how to feed your cows properly, resulting in them being underweight and having problems breeding back - I suppose that's the cows fault, too? I'm thinking you need to get a clue about raising cattle, what is the cow's fault and what is your fault - otherwise you're shooting yourself in the foot repeatedly and selling off potentially good genetics that could help your herd grow substantially! :roll: :roll: :roll:
The cow needs to be culled. If you try to breed her for 3 years and she will not settle . she is a cull.
If you get bangs in your herd your going to have alot of culls. :lol:
msscamp":1g9wfddx said:ENNOT":1g9wfddx said:I don't care what the situation is, get rid of them. The market has been good for too long to deal with that. That's why some herds are the way they are. ............."She's a real nice cow, and she's real nice when she calves, but the calves are always dead".
Get rid of her.
Oh, I see, thanks for clarifying this issue for me - the neighbor doesn't know diddly squat about ranching or bulls, he buys a vibrio infected bull from somewhere, the bull jumps/goes through the fence and your cow(s) contract vibrio and aborts - that's the cow's fault, though, because she didn't require him to wear a condom? Or how about you're a newbie and don't know the benefits of bangs vaccinating - one cow contracts brucellosis and proceeds to transmit it throughout your herd. I guess that is the cow's fault too, huh? How about this - you're a newbie and don't know how to feed your cows properly, resulting in them being underweight and having problems breeding back - I suppose that's the cows fault, too? I'm thinking you need to get a clue about raising cattle, what is the cow's fault and what is your fault - otherwise you're shooting yourself in the foot repeatedly and selling off potentially good genetics that could help your herd grow substantially! :roll: :roll: :roll: