j3cattle said:
If you brought a bull from Canada and just assumed he was going to thrive in the humidity and heat of Texas, I'm not sure you have any place running down someone else's management. My in-laws live in South Dakota and the type and kind of cattle he raises and I raise are very very different. My cattle tend to do ok heading north but his cattle heading south need extra care every single time. Just because an animal raised somewhere else needs some extra care to thrive doesn't mean the animal isn't high quality it just means he's bred/designed for a different scenario. So please don't be that guy who says all cattle should thrive In all scenarios because that's just flat not true.
I think your initial charge is fair and reasonable here. Upon initial consideration, of course I considered the transition in climate. Like so typical of the sunshine he blows, it was assured that "he sells bulls all over the country and that the bull will do do very good." (Grab ya a pen are start running a tally of how many times you see him use 'very' as a testament to just how good something is :

Even in the initial post here he rambles on about the 'native bush pastures' in an attempt to accentuate just how easy fleshing this bulldog is. It's just absurd as the reality is so far from how he presents it here on Steer Planet on a regular basis. Entertaining historian no doubt, but full of it when it comes to any accurate appraisal. Just look at the catalogued picture I bought the bull on as opposed to how he looked upon arrival. --Go back and look--
I've bought bulls from literally all over the country and NONE have fallen apart like this. In fact, beyond the advice of almost everyone, I gambled again and went back to Western Canada for another bull, this time from Saskvalley Shorthorns. The bull in my avatar, Saskvalley Alamo 8A. This bull has been, in all regards, one of the best I've ever used. I pulled 6 of the first 16 calves out of the bull I bought from Grant and had some of the biggest bw calves I've literally ever seen. I've only pulled 3 calves total in as many breeding season w/ Alamo and the birth weights have all been reasonably consistent (65-85) w/ every other bull of a double handful of other breeds I've used. Alamo's body condition has never been questionable. Never once have I had to consider "Do I need to get this bull out of the pond so I can ensure there's some cows getting bred." There's a reason Western Canadian bulls from Saskvalley, and even Muridale, for that matter, are being used by the most prominent Shorthorn breeders across the country. They're good solid functional bulls that can go out and get the job done all across North America. There's a reason you can't name even one using a bull from the prior mentioned place.
I certainly agree with you that not all cattle should thrive in all scenarios. I am a big proponent of specialized systematic crossbreeding so I get it. The primary issue presented here is, again, the frivolous claims in terms of their strengths and weaknesses and if they're so specialized, where exactly these cattle do and do not thrive. According to JIT--- "These cattle do it all!"
I challenge to find even one instance where he's used an honest degree of transparency to describe, as to make clear, the limitations w/ these cattle. If they're so specialized as to need this above and beyond 'extra care to thrive' you speak of, then a disclaimer is certainly warranted in the sale catalogue and in any advertisement.
oakview said:
I am sorry the HC bull in question did not work for you. I've purchased a few from several breeders myself in over 60 years of raising Shorthorns that didn't work out. i do not think it serves a useful purpose to question someone's integrity in a public forum.
If not in public, where those potential buyers who have the most to lose would be, then where?
And I think it's exceptionally useful-- what I would have given to have had a heads up that a much higher level of discernment needs to be used here than someone not associated with this racket might commonly expect.
Duncraggan said:
Seems a bit unreasonable that the breeder should hear about it on a public forum without first having had a call from the buyer.
Surely you give me more credit than that?