Visiting a stock cattle farm

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(Edited)

My foreman is working part time at another farm, he invited me to take a tour of his side job and we got to see hundreds of acres of fields. Along with hundreds of black angus cows. Seeing a farm that has been around for a long time was really cool.

There is also a video at the end of the post

At this farm they do stock cattle breeding. Meaning they do not slaughter them, only grow them big to sell them off to other farms.

Approaching the gate everything is kept close so no cows escape, this farm is off a busy highway road so its important to keep them where they need to be.

With the gates open we head on in.

I jump in his truck and we start touring around the farm. He points out the tag system for them and how different colors and dates mean different things.

Cows are seen feeding on the grassy fields, they seem to know my foremans truck and look to see what he is up to.

Some of the cows are just laying around, others are mingling and eating grass.

This farm has over a thousand acres, broken up into many sections along the road.

It was great we had a truck to drive around in so they did not have to walk everywhere.. Also the truck provided safety if a cow got mad at us or something.

This farm has lots of downed trees on it, we were told if we want the firewood we can go collect it.

Some fields are more over grown than others, this is how they rotate the cows between fields.

Here are some young cows, not fully grown yet but getting there.

We drive the truck up and they all gather to see what is going on.

Heading over to another part of the farm, we get to see more cows.

Its really peaceful out here, hope they like their farm.

Lots of fields and lots of cows, though it does not take them all that long to eat all the grass, so they must move them every so often.

My foreman comes across a sick calf, he notes its number and lets the main farm hand of this ranch know about it. A mother cow stands by close keeping an eye on the baby.

He looks at his record book to figure out whos cow this is and when it was born.

We drive on and my foreman spots a deer, though its too quick for him and gone before he can take a shot.

I take a shot too, but with my camera, a quick car mirror selfie. haha

Wild orange trees are found on the property, I had no idea these were so far north!

We did not get out to pick any, but cool to know. They look like black locust but grow more horizontal than vertical.

Visiting another pen, he has to keep these cows in and the other cows out.

One cow is very determined to get into there and he has to chase it away.

They all just kind of stare.. lol

Damn that one cow got in! He tries to cut it off but it gets away.

So he goes looking for it as it bunches in with the other cows, but its spotted.. the jig is up! He chases it to the gate and out of the enclosure.

Later on we come across a calf that was just born.

He tags it, gives it a shot of antibiotics and weighs it.

The mom stays close by and watches.

After he releases it and it goes back to its mom.

This calf was just born hours ago, and its already walking. My foreman says if its more than a day or two old its so fast you cannot even catch them on foot anymore. At that point trucks and horses are used to herd them and catch them when needed.

YouTube video link:



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30 comments
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The cows staring at you , and wondering if they are cool and beautiful in the photo that you take to them😅🤣Greetings by the way..

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Hehe yeah they did like to just stare at us a lot.

Hi there friend.

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Haha! It seems the cows were kind of observing you should incase you make any unwanted move towards them😂 I feel so bad for the sick calf, I hope he gets well soon.

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lol yeah they are always watching.

Me too, I hope it does.

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So cool man. I would love to have a cow one day. I’ve heard they are such gentle creatures and have sweet souls.

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They are quite calm and peaceful, maybe one day we will have some of our own. Hopefully you can do the same.

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That is pretty wild seeing citrus growing that far north. It must be some kind of 'trifoliate orange' or something similar.

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That is what I thought, too. I looked up trifoliate orange, I think it is what we call a sour sprout, but if it lives there I wonder why other oranges wouldn't. Here the grove owners have to place huge heaters in the groves when we have a freeze.

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Yeah, I wonder how it would handle having other orange trees grafted onto it.

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It appears the trifolate orange can survive in usda zones down to 6 and that is the zone I am in. So this is probably where its habitat is on its extreme edge as it just gets too cold further up. Sounds like its quite stringent tasting, but I am sure just like with crabapples you can turn just about any fruit into something tasty.

Its always cool to find cold hardy varieties of other plants. Cacti really surprise me in that way too.

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what I think is someone planted a good orange and the cold killed it back past the graft and for some strange reason it survived the cold and grew back as a sour sprout.

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Hello dear friend @solominer good morning
What a beautiful farm you have visited; Being close to the road is a great location
I love the idea of raising animals for other farms to take, I don't like the idea of slaughtering them in the same field
I'm not surprised to see so many animals with such a big
I take this opportunity to wish you a great weekend.

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Yeah it was quite nice visiting this farm. Me too, feels better visiting a farm that just raises them.

Thanks much, hope you do too.

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Love it! Reminds me of my father-in-law's farm. I'm from Brazil and my father-in-law owns a dairy farm. He has a lot of cows as well, but he only keeps the females. If a male is born, he sells it to other cattle farms to grow them bigger.
When I was living in Brazil we used to spend weekends in the farm, my kids loved it and they miss it a lot. They are always asking when are we going back to visit the farm. I loved it too, my mother-in-law grows all kinds of greens and veggies, they have chickens, and lots of fruit trees. We used to get most our grocery needs from there every weekend. This is something I miss a lot too, to have these fresh organic food.

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(Edited)

Oh cool...Hopefully you get to enjoy your mother in laws garden a lot. I hope to get chickens soon myself. Thats great you get all of that to feed yourselves. I hope to get there myself eventually.

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We should be going to visit in the next months, it's been a couple of years since we last been there.
If you ever go to Brazil, it will be a pleasure to show you the farm. The main farm house is an old house from the coffee era (1800's) in Rio de Janeiro. It's a beautiful place. His farm is the same style as the ones on this website: https://www.portalvaledocafe.com.br/fazendas_historicas.asp, but his farm is not listed there. It's located in Vassouras.

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Hi, Linda Fine with beautiful cows and a cute newborn calf. Nice post, have a good day.👍👍👍

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Yeah it was cool seeing the new born calf.. thanks man you too

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Do you know how hard it is to keep an orange tree from freezing in Florida when we have a freeze? How can one live in Virginia? That is crazy.

I loved the video, it reminds me of my Dad's place when he lived in Missouri, he had 250 acres and raised black Angus cows and he raised pigs.

I hope the sick calf makes it, mama cows can be quite protective he is lucky this one and the one with the newborn was somewhat ok with him messing with their calves.

When he was weighing the calf I was admiring the house in the background, it looks beautiful.

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Hah yeah theres a few trees you just do not see around here.. citrus, avocado and banana.. so when my foreman pointed out that tree I was quite surprised. It looks like its quite different from your cultivated oranges around where you live. The ones that are up here probably need lots of work before you can actually consume them.. unlike yours that can be eaten raw.

Oh that is cool, I had no idea. We hope to get some cows eventually. We plan on fencing in some of my back acreage in plan to get a dozen or so maybe next year or the year after that.

The houses around here are pre-civil war in many cases, I think they are working on restoring that one. Hopefully it will be all made nice too, but in the mean time it does have that old house feel to it.

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I am sure the orange tree is what we call a sour sprout, someone could have planted a good orange tree and it froze back past the graft, does it have thorns? Sour sprouts have thorns. It still amazes me that it is living there.

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That looks like fun! I've never worked with cattle but growing up we had lots of herds not far from where we lived! Some of those things get huge, especially the Texas Longhorns...

You cant' turn down free firewood!
!DHEDGE

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It was pretty cool seeing the cattle operation there, I as well do not have any experience with them. So it was all new to me and quite interesting.

So true, good to have a source if we need more.

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It looked like a lot of fun! You have a great place up there and surrounding area. It's great to be out in the country away from the hustle and bustle of city life!

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