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Your Opportunity to Chime in on Greg Judy's Methods
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<blockquote data-quote="Brute 23" data-source="post: 1797638" data-attributes="member: 6291"><p>I'm not saying it is easy but it is not as hard as some people make it out to be, either.</p><p></p><p>Yes, reputation and being known is every thing. Size helps with nothing of those. For the good or the bad, every one knows wal-mart.</p><p></p><p>... and Yes, you have to cater to the land owner. No one buys land or has land with the sole intension of leasing it out for cattle. It's always a secondary, or even further down the list, item. If they bought it to hunt, your grazing plan better compliment their hunting. If they want it for recreation, your cattle better not interfere with their recreation. If they love nature, you better make a plan that compliments that.</p><p></p><p>It has to be a win-win for both parties. I see so many people try to push their cattle too hard on people rather than pitching that their cattle will compliment the land owners plans for the property.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Brute 23, post: 1797638, member: 6291"] I'm not saying it is easy but it is not as hard as some people make it out to be, either. Yes, reputation and being known is every thing. Size helps with nothing of those. For the good or the bad, every one knows wal-mart. ... and Yes, you have to cater to the land owner. No one buys land or has land with the sole intension of leasing it out for cattle. It's always a secondary, or even further down the list, item. If they bought it to hunt, your grazing plan better compliment their hunting. If they want it for recreation, your cattle better not interfere with their recreation. If they love nature, you better make a plan that compliments that. It has to be a win-win for both parties. I see so many people try to push their cattle too hard on people rather than pitching that their cattle will compliment the land owners plans for the property. [/QUOTE]
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