i have 3 bulls that don't want to stop fighting and if tired or fixing wire. anybody have any ideas.
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how do you stop bulls fighting
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Agreed. Either buy a good old billy goat or keep the best of the three and ship the other 2, and then buy a yearling next spring so that you can start keeping bulls the care-free way by maintaining a good age difference between the oldest bull and the 2nd oldest. If there is one old dominant male and every knows it, the other's won't bother to fight. Works for us and others.
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build a nice big steel bull pen and let them in there sooner or later they ll figure out who the boss is.
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When I was a kid we always had a big pen of about 30 bulls. My grandfather had a billy goat in with them. When any of them started getting on the fight that old billy was right there to enjoy the fun! Not much fun having a goat slam you in the ribs when you are focussing on fighting another bull! That goat lived to fight and was always ready for a good go around!
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Had a big stinky billy for a few years and he did a whale of a job. Brought home a new cocky Black Limo bull from a sale and dumped him in a fairly small pen with two mature Bulls and El Stinko. Went for a walk up the hill confidently knowing everthing would be cool. The friend with me asked about the smacking noise coming from the pen. As we got back close enough to see the young Black bull was backed up against the water trough with El Stinko threatening him with another wack on the forhead from his impressive 2 1/2 foot spread and all of his 200 plus pounds.
If the big bulls would fight, you're right cowman, he'd join in the fun. Diggin in their ribs or givin their nuts a nasty scratch with those antlers.
Only two problems with a goat. Hard to keep em in a pen (and off truck hoods) and they stink to high heaven.
Good Luck
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15444 mentions a solution that works also? The real ugly fighting takes place when bulls are pretty evenly matched? If you run multi-bull pastures keeping a good age difference works very well? For example a three year old and a yearling? The three year old will do the majority of the work but the yearling will pick up the slack around the edge!
I never keep a bull longer than a three year old. The economics of rapid turn over are there if done right...in normal times? Not now.
I get all kinds of flack here for suggesting my system might work for the commercial man...but here goes anyway!
AI your top ten cows to the breed of your choice with the characteristics you are looking for. Expect 8 calves? Expect 4 bulls? Choose two. Don't feed them out heavy...in fact run them out with the cows all winter.
By spring you will have a yearling bull that isn't all that great to look at. The first year he doesn't accomplish a lot but by year two he is getting the job done. Use him in year three and ship him.
So you take a $750 calf, add $150 for the first winter? Now you have a $850 yearling? Pasture the first breeding year at $100 and another $150 for second winters feed...so now you have a two year old for $1100? Again pasture and winter feeding brings you to the third year...now you have a three year old for $1350? Use him for 2 months at $30/month and sell him? You have a total of $1410 in him. Pre BSE youthful bulls regulary brought over 70 cents a pound, so if he weighed 2000 lb. you are breaking even? Getting your bull for free?
Using this method you will also be assured his mother had good temperment, good udder, good feet. Feeding him you will not have foot and leg problems or any fertility problems. If you don't like his first calves you get rid of him with no loss?
Now consider the alternative? You buy a yearling at $2500. By two years old you have $2750 in him? By three $3000? You sell him after breeding and you have $3060 in him...and get $1400? So you don't have $1660 in your pocket, that you could have had?
The purebred industry likes to convince you that they have all the superior cows but this is not reality? There are commercial cows out there that are probably a lot better than any grand champion. In any decent sized herd there is probably enough genetic diversity when you are using AI that inbreeding won't likely be much of a problem?
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