The price of that prime rib is going to be pretty dear.
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Tell me about it, I don't own a horse or a 10 gallon hat, I can't rope, none of my belts have buckles the size of a dinner plate, my cows are so far from being range cows that they panic if they can't see every other cow across the pasture due to an obstacle or size, I don't even own a stock trailer and a dually diesel. On a positive note, our St. Bernard is learning to be a good cattle chasing dog, not sure if that is a trait they are noted for?Originally posted by sawfly1 View PostCows were work and no money. We had corals ,windbreaks ,shelters .
Should have had hills valleys and trees.
I was a terrible cowboy
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Took a different drive back went 30 miles west of us and then south through the valley to the city and then around on the highway and back roads to our home.
Yield in an area that usually has some very nice crops will be 25% to 35% less than ours for sure just by pod depth and spikelets on hrs and how it is filling.
Crops are shorter than normal.
One corn half section needs a drink soon very short for corn.
In the bottom of the valley on a really nice field, the oats have white spots. Haven't seen that since the late 80s.
But its a bin buster boys keep telling the world that.
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Driving in rural Ireland through villages, herds of sheep are not penned at all. They are liesurely strolling across highways and into town, oblivious to danger. I could smell the shishliki.ðŸ‘ðŸ²Originally posted by malleefarmer View Postmixed farming is actually alive and well in oz but mostly sheep
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