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new here...please forgive my ignorance...
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<blockquote data-quote="nightowl24" data-source="post: 749713" data-attributes="member: 14090"><p>i'm looking to start to get my feet wet in cattle. this WILL NOT be my life at this point, as i am a teacher/coach and i'm looking for something that i will enjoy doing and can gain some profits from when i retire from teaching. before i ask my question i will give as much info as i can so that you can give me as much info as possible...</p><p></p><p>i am looking to get a very small herd of cattle going in east texas(emory/point area). i'm looking for a breed or cross that is fairly easy to handle, can handle the hot east texas weather, and the cold temps during the winter. i would like a breed that sells pretty steady at all auctions with minimal supplemental feeding. i'm not running 100's of cattle here. this is me trying to very slowly build a nice solid herd of cattle that i WILL one day be my life. when the time is right i am looking to purchase one or two pairs and a nice bull to go with them.</p><p></p><p>so my question is if you have a good long time to build your herd with no pressure of losing money cause it is not what you are living off of how what breed would you go with and how would you go about dong this? </p><p></p><p>please forgive me if this isn't the right place for this topic. i didn't know if it were better suited for the breeds area or the beginners area. </p><p></p><p>from my limited knowledge and research i like the santa gerts as the cows and the charolais as my bull. been told by some people that i should go with the brangus cows and then go with a good charolais bull. i'm open to all suggestions. thank you in advance for any and all responses.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nightowl24, post: 749713, member: 14090"] i'm looking to start to get my feet wet in cattle. this WILL NOT be my life at this point, as i am a teacher/coach and i'm looking for something that i will enjoy doing and can gain some profits from when i retire from teaching. before i ask my question i will give as much info as i can so that you can give me as much info as possible... i am looking to get a very small herd of cattle going in east texas(emory/point area). i'm looking for a breed or cross that is fairly easy to handle, can handle the hot east texas weather, and the cold temps during the winter. i would like a breed that sells pretty steady at all auctions with minimal supplemental feeding. i'm not running 100's of cattle here. this is me trying to very slowly build a nice solid herd of cattle that i WILL one day be my life. when the time is right i am looking to purchase one or two pairs and a nice bull to go with them. so my question is if you have a good long time to build your herd with no pressure of losing money cause it is not what you are living off of how what breed would you go with and how would you go about dong this? please forgive me if this isn't the right place for this topic. i didn't know if it were better suited for the breeds area or the beginners area. from my limited knowledge and research i like the santa gerts as the cows and the charolais as my bull. been told by some people that i should go with the brangus cows and then go with a good charolais bull. i'm open to all suggestions. thank you in advance for any and all responses. [/QUOTE]
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