Somehow I find myself doing the same thing with my chickens. I know how I got here...certainly wasn't my original plan though.Wickedchicken that is a very handsome bull for sure. It's wonderful that you do selective breeding and raising your heard.
My husband has raised cattle his whole life here in Alabama we sold off his large heard many years ago when the guy he leased his land from sold the property.
While I had turkey and chickens I did selective breeding.
Pc Thanks. Most people around here lease land for either raising livestock or farm plots. We have have a small farm.

I haven't seen a mini jersey (sounds cute) but people near town had Dexters. Unless you have a lot of coyotes...I don't think there'd be a problem. They had theirs in a very treed pasture close to the highway...but no guard animals or any thing with them. I've never heard of any losses. I saw a Canadienne cow sold at the small animal auction. Very sweet, close to a Dexter. She was a milk cow. I've been craving having a milk cow ever since.We have a number of strictly-house-pet vets that once started out as cattle vets. Big money in being a cattle vet because they're few and far between, so high demand, and can be a big volume clientele depending on the size of the cattle operations. Gotta be hardcore and tough, and the ones I've talked to that have retired to saner critters did so because it was too physically demanding and hard on the body.
IF we decided to put cattle on our property (and per the CC&R's we're allotted two), I'd probably go mini Jersey or Dexter. But I doubt I ever will because of coyotes and a desire to have my orchard lawn stay that way and not be reduced to a dusty wallow.
It's true what was said about hatching vigor. We had an aggressive Emden goose (Atilla) who was basically a feathered Rottweiler. I could always tell his eggs in the incubator because they violently rocked before hatching. No problems selling his goslings, either, as they were little bulldozers in the brooder.
Love all the cattle pics!
I caught that.Cattle has now usurped beans. In case anyone was wondering.
Moo.

Being a breeder he was probably culling and keeping the best? Hopefully anyways. I know I don't want the problems with hatchery stock. I was disappointed in hatchery stock 25 years ago. I can only imagine that the base of my EE flock were probably hatchery stock at one time. But whatever was done and whatever was selected...I'll give 2 thumbs up. I can't take any credit. I do know on the one side the birds were what she kept and what survived the foxes. The other person was old school, as in from another country. That person worked at a research farm and the chickens were fed some of the grains produced. The farm researched grain diseases and toxins. Tough chickens. I'd go back to her in a flash to get hatching eggs. I didn't set out to breed chickens when I got these. They're just too good and too tough to waste the genetics...at least in my opinion.Same here with the vets. Our local vet does the bulk of his business with large animals and has a huge building with pens for cattle and horses that are being treated on site. He's in the field more than in the office due to the cattle he is dealing with and I often get the feeling that dealing with small pets is more of a public service to him than a calling...although he does a really good job with them.
Around us, especially with the Amish, it's not the number of cattle that their acreage can support but the number of cattle they can squeeze into a few acres. Most of the pasture on their farms is WAY overgrazed. I remember the ex-owner of our farm being here about a year after we bought the place and decided to let the pastures and timber repair itself . The pasture grass was knee high, mixed with clover. He looked at it and asked if that is what it would have looked like if he had pulled his livestock off of it for a year and we told him yes. You could just see the gears clicking in his head.
I'm very concerned with the hatching vigor of my flock. I have one little pullet from last June in our shop now because she just isn't thriving and developing as she should be and a cockerel with the flock that is the same way. I've put a hold on hatching any more chicks from my Buff O's for the summer and am concentrating on bringing in some new eggs from established flocks around us to hatch. I bought from an established NPIP breeder only to learn later that he was getting his breeding stock not from another established breeder but from a hatchery. If only I had known then what I know now................
I have to agree. I really appreciate the majesty and power of a bull. Really impressive pictures of that boy.
I used a WHOLE lot of words to get across a simple idea, didn't I.Gottcha about aggressive.
The boy in the first picture is the father to the one I am holding. Everyone that has them is very impressed with the Pita Pinta cock birds.


"The Pita Pinta is a good, regular layer, tough and responsive to the environment"
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I'm just trying to think outside the box with that whole idea.

I love both breeds! I LOVE the color of the Delaware.

Our employer had two milk cows in the time I've been here. The name escapes me but I want to say they were Brown Swiss. A few cows in the herd still have those big, brown, soft looking eyes.

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