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    #21
    Wasn't a freudian slip as much as an Apple slip, Burnt.
    Damn new IMAC is too smart by half - always
    "correcting" my spelling as I type. Drives me crazy.

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      #22
      I don't know how the difference came about, but when our niece and her husband, when working as nurses in Texas, used tell us they had to come home to get a decent steak.

      Texas is supposed to be famous for it's steak, but they said it tasted odd, and tended to be pretty tough. The first thing they would do when they got home was fire up the barbeque.

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        #23
        Texas - where the steaks are so tough they
        make your smile turn down like a brahma's ears.

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          #24
          Hey I was just pointing out a fact of our feedlot sector. I am a bit of a fan of the grass finished beef that I grow along with commodity calves. You won't find me trashing grain finished beef either, they are a very important part of the cattle economy in our province and produce a decent product. I was just pointing out that as long as our feedlots use corn we can not differentiate this product as being best because it is barley fed.

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            #25
            Maybe climate makes a difference? Even in our big feedlots, for a large part of the year it's cold enough that the cattle don't stand around in mud, and spend their days fighting flies. They have to be cleaner, even in big numbers.

            Nothing less appetizing IMHO than a slaughter steer climbing out of a truck covered in mud (manure?) balls. A nice clean fuzzy coated one is another picture altogether.

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              #26
              Climate sure does make a difference.
              -42 with wind chill to arrive home to a chinook 4. Makes every beef steak taste good. I was in Australia this fall and had the opportunity to visit some main cattle station that raise a animal called DroughtMaster charxbrama,angusxbrama,your choice of cross. These steers are only grass fed, sold as two year olds. Very interesting, Australia has a band on our cattle, but we stupid Canadians continue to allow Aussie beef to be imported into our market...

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                #27
                Kato, you should come inspecting fats at
                feedlots with me sometime. I haven't seen
                clean fuzzy fats since September. Most are
                so tagged up they make brand inspection
                rather pointless; unless you want to give
                them a haircut, and feedlot staff look at
                you a little sideways when you mention it.

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                  #28
                  To me we ought to be a lot more forward
                  thinking as an industry, and as a
                  society in general. We know oil and gas
                  are not going to last forever. When
                  they'll run out, who knows? And
                  honestly, I don't care to argue the
                  time, we simply know it's going to come
                  eventually. So, we ought to be planning
                  ahead for a time when we cannot harvest
                  millions of tons of silage, barley and
                  corn. We ought to be planning ahead for
                  a time when we cannot manufacture
                  glyphosate, draxxin or ivomec( If they
                  aren't banned first due to consumer
                  pressure ). We ought to be planning
                  ahead for a time when genetics that will
                  fatten on forage alone in under 30
                  months are an absolute necessity, and a
                  rarity.

                  Most of you don't want to hear this kind
                  of talk, but it's how I feel, and it's
                  what we plan for. And besides, Randy
                  said he missed my controversial Hippie
                  twist to everything on the boards, so
                  I'll throw the first snow ball and take
                  whatever comes next. lol

                  Comment


                    #29
                    This time of year, there's no excuse for cattle with clods of manure stuck to them.

                    A message for the feedlots out there... It's called bedding guys.... use it.

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