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marbling and tenderness genes
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<blockquote data-quote="greenwillowherefords" data-source="post: 216403" data-attributes="member: 587"><p>Well stated. I've yet to have a bad one, and I raise a couple a year for beef.</p><p></p><p>Most of my friends don't feed anything besides range cubes in the winter. I buy twenty dollar hay, so I provide some cubes in the winter to keep protein levels up. Something like $1.75 per head per week's worth. In the spring and summer, just a small treat two or three times a week when I go check on them. I mean just a few mouthfuls and that is it. When I want to work them, they will come right into the corral for a snack. I don't have very good pastures. I'd love to see what mine would do with the kind of grass that would give them their full potential, but I can't complain as it is.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="greenwillowherefords, post: 216403, member: 587"] Well stated. I've yet to have a bad one, and I raise a couple a year for beef. Most of my friends don't feed anything besides range cubes in the winter. I buy twenty dollar hay, so I provide some cubes in the winter to keep protein levels up. Something like $1.75 per head per week's worth. In the spring and summer, just a small treat two or three times a week when I go check on them. I mean just a few mouthfuls and that is it. When I want to work them, they will come right into the corral for a snack. I don't have very good pastures. I'd love to see what mine would do with the kind of grass that would give them their full potential, but I can't complain as it is. [/QUOTE]
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