leanin' H
Well-known member
Tonight we ran up the valley to where we summer our little bunch. If it ever warms up the grass will explode with all the moisture we've had the past week and there is more coming this weekend!
Scattering salt here isnt nearly as fun as up on the mountain with my cousin but it was appreciated by the bovines. Sisters hitting the loose trace mineral trough.
While others preferred the trace mineral/salt block. We try to provide our cattle with many and various options of supplements. :roll: :wink:
Split eared (thanks to a tag hang up) heifer calf with wrinkled nose pose.
Some more of the youngsters.
Well, it tastes like...........salt.
For only being away from salt/mineral for a week, they sure hit it hard. Sorry for all the tongue wagging.
My cows have horrible manners! :shock:
Last year our bull injured himself pretty good when he got a stick stuck right next to his sheath. Maybe you remember my photo's at the vet. We decided to ship him before winter and not chance him testing bad this spring. Here is a pretty good reason we might have screwed up! A bull calf out of our best cow and the injured bull.
Same bull calf. He is built as well as I have seen at this stage in his life. Came small at 84 LBS, hit the ground growing and is just blossoming. Left him a bull and we'll see how he looks this fall.
The bull we bought in March is coming along nicely although he has some large tracks to fill.
A little better shot of him. I really like his feet and legs.
Poster child for the cork-eyed H outfit! I kept this calf a bull too. He's out of a Select bull called Decatur.
While a Toyota 4-runner aint a very western or romantic salt pack train, it got the job done. The cows are happy, the grass is coming along nicely and the veiw isnt bad. In the coming weeks, I'll find myself a horseback on the mountain more and more. If ya happen to see a guy with a big smile, that'd be me!


While others preferred the trace mineral/salt block. We try to provide our cattle with many and various options of supplements. :roll: :wink:

Split eared (thanks to a tag hang up) heifer calf with wrinkled nose pose.

Some more of the youngsters.

Well, it tastes like...........salt.

For only being away from salt/mineral for a week, they sure hit it hard. Sorry for all the tongue wagging.


Last year our bull injured himself pretty good when he got a stick stuck right next to his sheath. Maybe you remember my photo's at the vet. We decided to ship him before winter and not chance him testing bad this spring. Here is a pretty good reason we might have screwed up! A bull calf out of our best cow and the injured bull.

Same bull calf. He is built as well as I have seen at this stage in his life. Came small at 84 LBS, hit the ground growing and is just blossoming. Left him a bull and we'll see how he looks this fall.

The bull we bought in March is coming along nicely although he has some large tracks to fill.

A little better shot of him. I really like his feet and legs.

Poster child for the cork-eyed H outfit! I kept this calf a bull too. He's out of a Select bull called Decatur.

While a Toyota 4-runner aint a very western or romantic salt pack train, it got the job done. The cows are happy, the grass is coming along nicely and the veiw isnt bad. In the coming weeks, I'll find myself a horseback on the mountain more and more. If ya happen to see a guy with a big smile, that'd be me!



