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- Pride of ownership

- Income from selling excess stock (cull cows/bulls/steers/heifers)

- Income from selling milk (dairy only)

- Meat for your own use

- Appreciation for hard work involved

- Seeing new calves being born

- Low maintenance (esp. beef cattle)

- Flexibility options to match what management plans you have

- Work with animals every day

- Gain knowledge and experience that can be used to pass on to other people

- Flexibility according to cattle/grain markets

- Marketing options (direct, private-treaty, auction, dispersal)

- Choice of what sector[s] to follow: seedstock, commercial, stocker, feedlot, contract grazing, dairy, etc.

- Ability to raise cattle almost anywhere in the world

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More importantly, cattle provide over 900 byproducts that are used by EVERYONE. They contribute to the roads we drive on, medicinals and pharmaceuticals, leather and other products, shampoos and soaps and lotions, even the tires on our cars. There is so much we get from cows, it's amazing that people think they can truly be vegetarian! Cattle also act as fire retardants in brushy area and can reduce the increasingly dangerous "fire load" that we all see, esp. in the West. If we don't let fires burn (naturally), then we should allow cows to graze, esp. on marginal lands where the brush and undergrowth thrives. As a result, there is nothing for grazing for deer and other wildlife and the brush SUCKS up water faster than people can imagine.

If water, fire, and open land is of importance to people, then they should learn to appreciate and understand the incredible contributions cattle -- who coexist with wildlife and waterfowl and rivers/streams, etc. -- without harming them! The misinformation abounds about cattle, which is terribly sad because they can contribute so much environmentally to our lives. Where cattle are given open space, wildlife also thrives. In fact, 75% of ALL preservation of wildlife is protected by RANCHES and private lands -- NOT public land!

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12y ago

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