If you are starting a herd, I would get advice from someone knowledgeable about cattle. There are traits (docility, feed efficiency, etc.) that should be selected for that Greg Judy does not select for. While cattle that have short hair in the warmer months are desirable, it doesn't seem to affect flies much. I have seen Greg Judy post a video of a female, saying she did not have a fly on her, and she was constantly swatting flies during the whole video. Bulls should have hair on their scrotum (the testicles are inside the scrotum, and no bull has hair on the testicles). If a bull doesn't have hair on his scrotum, he likely has mange, or possibly a genetic defect, and should be culled. Greg Judy should get someone knowledgeable to speak at his grazing schools. He says a lot of things about grass and grazing that are not true. He seems to brag that his cattle are very inefficient at grazing. He also makes excuses why his grass is not good, instead of trying to improve his pastures. Greg Judy does not seem to recognize docility. I have seen him refer to cattle as docile which are not. Another channel bought a heifer from him, for breeding, which is not docile. From this video, you will want to keep an eye on behavior. You may cull these on docility. If cattle won't stay in a polywire fence, either they are not docile, or the wire or charger is not very good. Yes, you should have more than a polywire fence, but they should not be running through polywire.
Is the inefficient grazing comment you make about his small cattle? It seems like that is a separate issue to feed conversion ratio. And about docility, I assume he is a layman saying “docility” as a colloquial term. I assume you mean there is a rubric?
@eboremilly6296 he claims his cattle should be more efficient because they are small. You can have 4 times the number of 1,200 lbs. cows in the same area he has one 1,000 lbs. cow. And the 1,200 lbs. cows will each wean a heavier calf. This has been done for over 40 years. Docility is something people have selected for over many decades, if not centuries. The standards for docility are well known.
Fun!
Great informative vid 👍
Ans Congrats !!
Thanks!
Congrats on 1k! Nice interview.
Thank you
First video I saw of your channel! I enjoyed your conversation with Greg. Hopefully I can make the trek down for Canada to Greg;s school someday.
Thanks, hope you enjoy the rest of our content
That life comment is PRICELESS
Great information! Thank you Jorge.
Congratulations!!!
Thanks Jorge, that was great to see you selecting your new bull !
Microphone has great sound
When you hit 1000 subs get a better camera your channel will grow better im subscribing to your channel now Greg Judy is the GOAT
What country do you live in?
US
@@heavenlyfarms
it is a senepol ?
@@stepone729 South Poll
If you are starting a herd, I would get advice from someone knowledgeable about cattle. There are traits (docility, feed efficiency, etc.) that should be selected for that Greg Judy does not select for.
While cattle that have short hair in the warmer months are desirable, it doesn't seem to affect flies much. I have seen Greg Judy post a video of a female, saying she did not have a fly on her, and she was constantly swatting flies during the whole video.
Bulls should have hair on their scrotum (the testicles are inside the scrotum, and no bull has hair on the testicles). If a bull doesn't have hair on his scrotum, he likely has mange, or possibly a genetic defect, and should be culled.
Greg Judy should get someone knowledgeable to speak at his grazing schools. He says a lot of things about grass and grazing that are not true. He seems to brag that his cattle are very inefficient at grazing. He also makes excuses why his grass is not good, instead of trying to improve his pastures.
Greg Judy does not seem to recognize docility. I have seen him refer to cattle as docile which are not. Another channel bought a heifer from him, for breeding, which is not docile. From this video, you will want to keep an eye on behavior. You may cull these on docility.
If cattle won't stay in a polywire fence, either they are not docile, or the wire or charger is not very good. Yes, you should have more than a polywire fence, but they should not be running through polywire.
Is the inefficient grazing comment you make about his small cattle? It seems like that is a separate issue to feed conversion ratio.
And about docility, I assume he is a layman saying “docility” as a colloquial term. I assume you mean there is a rubric?
@eboremilly6296 he claims his cattle should be more efficient because they are small. You can have 4 times the number of 1,200 lbs. cows in the same area he has one 1,000 lbs. cow. And the 1,200 lbs. cows will each wean a heavier calf. This has been done for over 40 years.
Docility is something people have selected for over many decades, if not centuries. The standards for docility are well known.
Could you at least show us something…LIKE THE BULL AS GREG IS TALKING ABOUT IT???
He was it just out of focus what how you talk to him Greg said he a bull with a big chest and thick neck
Teach me master your Kung Fu 🥋 😂. Shalom