My thoughts too, Soapweed.
Haymaker, we went the Limo route in the early 80's.
Know what? I really liked them. After having straightbred
Herefords, (sorry folks) those Limmy calves were so smart.
They never got caught in brush and couldn't figure out
how to get out. They had a lot of vigor. The bulls were easy
to manage and when we gathered the bulls out of the cows
they would stride right out and go. They were good dispositioned.
We didn't have trouble with any of them jumping, except one.
I really did like them. They are handsome cattle.
The problem was the replacement heifers. If you ever got one
to 4 years old, you had them forever. But too many fell out
before then.
I know you don't plan on keeping replacements, but putting
these bulls on mixed breed heifers, you most likely will get
some birthweights you aren't happy with...OR the folks who buy
them will get bweights they aren't happy with. And then your phone
will be ringing. At least that is what would happen in this country.
Are they PB Limousin? Don't find many PB Limousin and that
presents another problem. What is the rest of the genetics?
I remember the lady we bought our Limousin bulls from showing
us some things about Limousin. We went to a sale with her and I
picked out a halfbloold Limousin bull. He was a good son-of-a-gun.
She told me, "No. That's what you want to GET, that's not what you
want to BUY. Buy the PB, cross him with your angus and this is
what you will get from doing that."
Along that line, the sorriest calves I ever saw were Limousin-Chininia
(I'm sure that isn't spelled right, but I'm too tired to care, right now) :wink:
cross. I was at the scale when those calves were weighed. I could look
right under their belly and they weighed 450 lbs.
The owner said, "I don't believe I'll try that again."
Our cousins in Wyoming use Limousin bulls, but not on their heifers.
FWIW