#31
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A remote control helicopter and bluetooth head set. Gonna get a wireless camera for the copter and get some aerial shots.
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#32
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1/8th of a steer. Local, grass fed beef. Storing it at the folks bc it is a lot more meat than i can fit in the freezer. Can't imagine how much meat is on a full steer.
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#33
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Quote:
You have to figure you have to have a Freezer, and the electricity to run it year around. And you end up throwing X amount of it away to freezer burn etc.. And God help you if your electric goes off for 2 to 3 days. But 75 pounds is not a lot if you have a family with a few teenage boys in it lol. And if the Steer is meat is tough as nails you are not going to be a happy camper either. I used to raise Steers and some are just more active and more healthy than others. And different Breeds are better, ergo, Black Angus, and blood lines factor into it also. I never let them get to full weight before I slaughtered them for me. The older the tougher, too young not enough meat, unless you are into a shitpot of Veal lol, and damn small roasts and steaks. So most are pretty good, but some not so good. It is sort of a crap shoot. | |||
Last edited by webrunner5; 12-28-2014 at 01:55 PM..
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#34
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Quality beef wouldn't have anything to do with heart disease.....
Don't know if you know this or not but grass fed animals develop very differently than animals fed grains and corn (both of which they are not adapted to eat). Which is why you can eat grass fed cow butter (Kerrygold) and it has tremendous health benefits. As opposed to eating normal butter or, even worse, margarine which both have demonstrable negative impacts on human health. As an additional fun fact, did you know margarine was originally developed as cheap turkey food for large farms? They discontinued its use when it was shown that it was making all the turkeys sick/cancerous. So they switched over and marketed it as a "healthy" alternative to butter. What a joke. | ||
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