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New Member concerned about Huge Growth
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<blockquote data-quote="nemecekj" data-source="post: 99157" data-attributes="member: 1922"><p>Why not spend 65? As I have said in previous postings... These animals are not bred for beef or dairy... they are kindof like a fall back plan in case of hard times... breed em and have em for pets and hope you never have to sell them. This isn't a full throttle operation... dad's a construction worker and moms a nurse... they have working lives seperate from the cattle. A registered Angus bull with a champion bloodline to us is worth a lot more than the $65 to figure out what's going on with him... We just think he is a beautiful, well-tempered, profitable at times, pet!if it's genetic we'll have to take all but the origional 10 cows to the sale barn... so it's a pretty darn good idea to spend "65 bucks" to find out whether or not 3/4's of em are gonna drop dead... think about that. I'm not takling about putting the damn bull through friggin' chemo! I'm talking about getting it looked at by people who have up to date knowledge. the vets in my area are working out of their houses and pushing 80... they are not spending money on cnotinued education, and don't have a steady enough hand to give a shot... they caoch us through injections of ANY kind... when a vet <u><em><strong>looks</strong></em></u> at it and says... "I don't know what it is... but give him this!" That is not the equivalent of coming to the university and having him <u><em><strong>checked</strong></em></u> out, <u><em><strong>thoroughly</strong></em></u>! And it's the same amount of money as the ole guys</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nemecekj, post: 99157, member: 1922"] Why not spend 65? As I have said in previous postings... These animals are not bred for beef or dairy... they are kindof like a fall back plan in case of hard times... breed em and have em for pets and hope you never have to sell them. This isn't a full throttle operation... dad's a construction worker and moms a nurse... they have working lives seperate from the cattle. A registered Angus bull with a champion bloodline to us is worth a lot more than the $65 to figure out what's going on with him... We just think he is a beautiful, well-tempered, profitable at times, pet!if it's genetic we'll have to take all but the origional 10 cows to the sale barn... so it's a pretty darn good idea to spend "65 bucks" to find out whether or not 3/4's of em are gonna drop dead... think about that. I'm not takling about putting the damn bull through friggin' chemo! I'm talking about getting it looked at by people who have up to date knowledge. the vets in my area are working out of their houses and pushing 80... they are not spending money on cnotinued education, and don't have a steady enough hand to give a shot... they caoch us through injections of ANY kind... when a vet [u][i][b]looks[/b][/i][/u] at it and says... "I don't know what it is... but give him this!" That is not the equivalent of coming to the university and having him [u][i][b]checked[/b][/i][/u] out, [u][i][b]thoroughly[/b][/i][/u]! And it's the same amount of money as the ole guys [/QUOTE]
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