2 F1 Akaushi Bull Calves... East TX
- Listing Number
- 011C168-201
- Location
- East Texas
- Ship From
- Kemp, TX
- Breed
- Akaushi
- Registered?
- No
- Number for Sale
- 2 Head
- Origin
- Home Grown
- Age
- 9 to 10 months old as of late November
- Est. Weight
- Average 650 lbs.
- Birth Weight
- 55 lbs. to 60 lbs.
- Fertility
- Will Guarantee Fertile
- Frame
- Moderate
- Condition
- Medium Flesh
- Vaccinations
- Covexin 8, Calv 9, Ivermec, & LV-6
- Horns
- Polled
- Pasture/Feed
- Native Pasture, Rye, Cubes, w/ mineral
- Sell Part/All
- Any Number
- Delivery Date
- Available Now
- Price
- $1,700 per head
- Firm/Negotiable
- Firm
- Payment Terms
- Certified Funds or Cash
- Seller
- Contact Information
These are F1 50 % Charolais polled or Brangus polled bulls...
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Out of registered stock as American Akaushi Assoc. or American Wagyu Assoc.
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Bulls double registered sires with Rueshaw, big al, iwg 69z, wsi Umemura, judo, Akiko, Hikari x Kaedemaru, and dai 10 Mitsumaru ko 76 x three crosses.
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Commercial stock bulls for beef production with size.
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Our last steer was 1,650 lbs on the hoof.
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D42/D43 Akaushi bulls are sires to homo polled registered Charolais or Brangus cows.
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#16 bull now 5 months old. Polled. Bull F1 Wagyu/Charolais!
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Can be registered with the Akaushi association with sire in American Akaushi association as an F1 sire.
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Black bull is a 75% or F2 Cross 50% Akaushi/ 25% black wagyu / and 25 % Charolais.
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We have two of tan and two of black/brown colors of Wagyu for commercial beef production soon.
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Check out "y2wagyu.com" our website.
Seller's Other Listings
NO SOLICITATIONS... Contact welcomed from Prospective Buyers Only.
Contact for any other reason makes you both unethical and a nuisance.
- Why Listings on The Cattle Range Are Not Always Current.
- Notify TCR Anonymously if Seller tells you the cattle are SOLD or not for sale.
Warning to Sellers:
Be aware of the following Internet Scam...
A prospective buyer contacts seller and agrees to the asking price and then tells the seller...“Give me your address and I'll mail you Certified Funds right away for the cost of the cattle plus $1,500.00 for trucking to my ranch. Deposit the check and then send the $1,500.00 by Western Union to my trucking company. After they receive the funds, they'll contact you about picking up the cattle.”
The problem is that the check is counterfeit. An unwary seller deposits the check and wires the "freight costs to the trucking company." A few days later, the seller's bank contacts him to advise him the check is a fake and his $1,500.00 is gone.
Because these scammers typically e-mail or text sellers, avoid buyers wanting to do a transaction exclusively by e-mail or texting... If they won't talk to you, caution is in order.
Additionally, unless you are certain a buyer is legitimate...
- Do not accept Certified Funds as payment without calling the Bank or other issuing entity to verify the validity of the check. It could be counterfeit.
- Do not provide your checking account information for payment by wire transfer to a prospective buyer. Scammers, in possession of your name, phone number, e-mail address, bank account information, and utilizing software available on the "Dark Web" designed to hack into financial institutions and banks, will attempt to gain access to your account.