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Raising Registered Bulls and Bull development
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<blockquote data-quote="TB-Herefords" data-source="post: 514195" data-attributes="member: 7171"><p>You can finish bulls off with out getting them too fat. when you offer them for sell you should have them pasture ready. If you have buyers that want bulls befor they are offered they should understand the feed ration the bulls are on and they should wean them from the ration to prevent melt down or offer to keep the bulls till weaned from the ration. Figure what kind of gain you want to put on them and feed a ration according to that. Some will convert better and some wont but you wont have a bunch of fat bulls. I think that's better than pushing them to the max till yearlings then backing off.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TB-Herefords, post: 514195, member: 7171"] You can finish bulls off with out getting them too fat. when you offer them for sell you should have them pasture ready. If you have buyers that want bulls befor they are offered they should understand the feed ration the bulls are on and they should wean them from the ration to prevent melt down or offer to keep the bulls till weaned from the ration. Figure what kind of gain you want to put on them and feed a ration according to that. Some will convert better and some wont but you wont have a bunch of fat bulls. I think that's better than pushing them to the max till yearlings then backing off. [/QUOTE]
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