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Opinions on bull - go nuts
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<blockquote data-quote="Aaron" data-source="post: 805957" data-attributes="member: 1682"><p>HD, I never posted it before, but the bad feet were a symptom of the feed regime he was on with the new owner. I fed to grow, he fed to gain, indefinitely. I never took a pic of them, but this bulls front knees were blown out from all the heavy feeding. As far as I know, that bull was given about 3 gallons of barley/day for the remainder of his life...he was pampered.</p><p></p><p>This is a few months since he sold, but he was just over the ton mark, 2090, I think, and he went for 67.50/cwt or close to it. </p><p></p><p>Sporder, the new owner was a commercial man, so there were no registered offspring, and the dam of the sire came from a purebred herd that didn't keep performance numbers. The best numbers to go off of would be his own and his sire's, who was a common AI bull in Canada in the 70's and 80's.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Aaron, post: 805957, member: 1682"] HD, I never posted it before, but the bad feet were a symptom of the feed regime he was on with the new owner. I fed to grow, he fed to gain, indefinitely. I never took a pic of them, but this bulls front knees were blown out from all the heavy feeding. As far as I know, that bull was given about 3 gallons of barley/day for the remainder of his life...he was pampered. This is a few months since he sold, but he was just over the ton mark, 2090, I think, and he went for 67.50/cwt or close to it. Sporder, the new owner was a commercial man, so there were no registered offspring, and the dam of the sire came from a purebred herd that didn't keep performance numbers. The best numbers to go off of would be his own and his sire's, who was a common AI bull in Canada in the 70's and 80's. [/QUOTE]
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