Not that I am aware at this time--at least no active members in the South Poll Association are from CA. You are correct though, they would be great in CA.
@@brianjonker510 He runs 9 months for other reasons. He just doesn't want calves born in winter so he pulls the bulls for three months. Depends a lot on your market too. If you are direct marketing it is a lot easier to meet demand if you have animals reaching maturity throughout the year instead of all at once.
Calving ease is a beautiful thing.
When I get some cattle next year, they will be South Polls.
Would be interested in purchasing some heifers or bred cows, I'm in southern Illinois.
South polls in florida? Any breeder info would be appreciated.
Wondering how these cattle would do in the cold and deep snow of Northern Ontario Canada?
Your answer is in their name.
Look pretty shorthaired. It was summer in the video so any shag would have shed. I know it gets plenty hot in Missouri.
Oh Jesus….wise use people.
Where do y’all live you and Judy?
what is the price of 5 months female calf
Are there any south polls in california? Seems like a great breed for our climate.
Not that I am aware at this time--at least no active members in the South Poll Association are from CA. You are correct though, they would be great in CA.
I live in California and would love to get one for my freezer. I'd share it with my kids and grandkids. :)
Are they Red Angus Cows,
The South Poll is a composite combining four breeds: Angus, Hereford, Senepol, and Barzon (taken from their website)
@@TheKajunkat Ah ok. That is where the heat tolerance comes in
What farm is this in south Missouri? We are located in central Missouri.
Ronnie Brignac - Near Baker Creek Seed Co. heirloomseeds. com
Been watching Greg Judy, he talks the same way you guys do about the south poll, well I guess you guys talk all the time.
LoL n Greg Judy has to run his bulls for 9 months the year to keep them pregnant. Thats horrible.
@@brianjonker510 He runs 9 months for other reasons. He just doesn't want calves born in winter so he pulls the bulls for three months. Depends a lot on your market too. If you are direct marketing it is a lot easier to meet demand if you have animals reaching maturity throughout the year instead of all at once.