Cattle farming
248 creative works found
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Sales of this Design? – 3 sales so far :) / Baby Bull Production is something I created not that long ago. It’s a mixed media piece on canvas textured paper…...i did it in response to the chilled out cows at Mullumbimby, northern New South Wales, who seem to be very laid back, i suspect they are indulging in the ‘other’ kind of grass also….... they have this real chilled look about them, and I’ve never seen cows anywhere else that have this way about them. I put it in the Casino Art Exhibition and it was the only painting that sold, every year a male school teacher goes to that show, or so the legend goes…....and purchases a piece…...it was my lucky year. Tonight I was asked if I’d ever sold a painting in a gallery…well, yes, and at exhibitions and privately. To date I believe I have sold between 30 and 40 original paintings, which I am very proud of…..in the early days 2002 I was very prolific, things have slowed down a bit with my painting now, because i am much more deliberate and take a lot of time to imbue my paintings with layers and love and depth…..it is just how i have grown as an artist, it is nice to report that there is growth along the journey…(and sales lol)!!! Somebody also has a print of these cows and loves them very much from what I understand lol
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cute baby sheep
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/ Ladies Laceup Keds Sneaker at Zazzle / Moo Cow Sunrise Kids Keds Sneakers at Zazzle / Bag @ Zazzle / Mug @ Zazzle / Moo Cow Sunrise Family / by Karin Taylor digital design created in / wall art would be ideal for kids, babies, nurseries, / children’s hospitals, maternity wards, schools, day care centres TShirts, Prints, Greeting Cards available in this design
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I was driving along side some of the many paddocks that frequent my area (the Hawkesbury area) when I came across this cow, the light seemed to be pretty decent and seeing as how the cow was a few metres away I decided it would be a good opportunity to test out my new 55-200mm lens.. / The cow just would not look at me (unusual for a cow) and then finally it decided to sneak a glance so I snapped the shutter and this was the result.. / Post processing involved adjusting the exposure, contrast and levels, and then applying a vignette and a monochrome filter. / I havent uploaded anything for quite some time so I decided to throw this image to the wind and see if it flies or crashes and burns.. / As per usual comments and critiquing are more than welcome, and thanks very much for taking a look! Best viewed LARGE EXIF Data / Camera Body: Nikon D40 / Lens: AF-S DX Zoom-Nikkor 55-200mm f/4-5.6G ED / Date: 15/04/2008 / Time: 4:23pm / Aperture: f5.6 / Shutter: 1/320 / ISO: 200 / Focal Length: 200mm
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Sales of this TShirt ? – 1 sale so far :) / Baby Bull Production TShirt by Karin Taylor Baby Bull Production is something I created not that long ago. It’s a mixed media piece on canvas textured paper…...i did it in response to the chilled out cows at Mullumbimby, northern New South Wales, who seem to be very laid back, i suspect they are indulging in the ‘other’ kind of grass also….... they have this real chilled look about them, and I’ve never seen cows anywhere else that have this way about them. I put it in the Casino Art Exhibition and it was the only painting that sold, every year a male school teacher goes to that show, or so the legend goes…....and purchases a piece…...it was my lucky year. Tonight I was asked if I’d ever sold a painting in a gallery…well, yes, and at exhibitions and privately. To date I believe I have sold between 30 and 40 original paintings, which I am very proud of…..in the early days 2002 I was very prolific, things have slowed down a bit with my painting now, because i am much more deliberate and take a lot of time to imbue my paintings with layers and love and depth…..it is just how i have grown as an artist, it is nice to report that there is growth along the journey…(and sales lol)!!! Somebody also has a print of these cows and loves them very much from what I understand lol
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On a day out with the family and friends at Ripley Castle, North Yorkshire in England, we all went for a walk in the fields surrounding the estate where the cattle roam free. Apart form the herd was this one cow who looked as if he were playing a game of ‘Hide n’ Seek’ with his friends. As soon as they came toward him, he ran away to another tree and was looking back at them. I just managed to capture two shots of him (neither are brilliant) but because it was so dark, I had to really brighten it and take some shadow away. This is the result. I think it is quite funny. I have been a ranch hand for many years and have never seen cattle as playful as this. Enjoy. Canon EOS-1Ds Mark ll, 28-300mm lens, f/16, shutter 1/60, ISO 200 / Cokin graduated grey ND filter 120, post processing done in iPhoto
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Let that be a Warning to You!
by Wendy SleeAs I sink in my chair, strong coffee in hand, wishing it was something more potent…. I wonder if any of you really need to hear my stor…
As I sink in my chair, strong coffee in hand, wishing it was something more potent…. I wonder if any of you really need to hear my story of disaster, but then I smile and realize I have an important message to share…. You simply must NOT lose yourself in the bubble for too long, or too often. / Life does have habit of sneaking up on you, or past you when you are missing in action…..(or engrossed in the bubble). / It can even be dangerous for health, home and sanity…. / I just learned that the hard way….. Here I sat, several hours ago, morning coffee in hand, the kids were on the school bus, the animals fed, a load of washing was buzzing away in the machine and I felt safe to “indulge” ...... / aaah….even the noises in the laundry, the animal sounds, the bird song could not shake my focus on some of your wonderful images…... and writing my messages back to you…. / UNTIL… / crash…. / bang… / holy shite! / on my front verandah, the sound of hooves….BIG ones! (now I have little horses who often would climb up on my old wooden verandah and clatter around to get my attention, or look for treats, but this was way too big for them!) I carefully open my front door, and there staring me in the face – a big black cow’s butt…..well, a steer’s rear end, to be exact. / This bloody great thing with his herd had wandered into my front yard demolishing everything in sight, and he, with the huge stick on his neck (put there because he kept getting through fences and I can tell you, it obviously hasn’t stopped him!) had decided to climb up the steps and wander casually along my verandah….eating my pot plants…. / So there he was in the sunshine, casually gazing out at his lesser buddies from the height of my humble verandah….. I knew if I scared him from behind like this, he would smash the glass table and chairs, the kids’ bikes and the multitude of potted plants and fall of the high end of the verandah (I live on the slope of a hill) so I thought I might go around and climb out my bedroom window and chase him quietly (ha ha) back to the opening where he might “get off”..... I decided to grab the broom from the laundry to help and as I stepped out to the back half of my house, my feet went ankle deep in water. / The whole room was flooded…. a hose had come unplugged, and both cycles of the washing machine dumped out on the laundry floor…..and you know the best thing about living in an old farm house? / When someone builds on a back room, they do it on the cheap, nobody bothers with a spirit level, so the floors slope the wrong way…..the drain holes are all uphill, and the water floods downhill. / again I say “holy you know what!!” So there was the kids playroom, carpet and couch, the bathroom, the sunroom and laundry all under water, and it was still flowing back through to the rest of my house. Did I use a four letter word? / who? / me? / (No I used dozens! AND made up some new ones….) The bovine was forgotten, I grabbed the broom and started swishing the water back towards any opening where i might get it out of those rooms. Grabbing clothes and clean washing to be folded, and kids toys and books up out of the water…... / aaaah you get the picture. / OF course the water just kept flooding back….. living on a hill has its perks ha ha…...but for this I would need to turn the house around. I wondered if I could knock a hole in the downhill wall and just let it out that way….. / but NO… / it had to be mopped and swished and cleaned up, every damn last drop. On one frantic rush through the house to get more towels and mops, I spied the RB screen waiting on my computer and just thought… / “damn!” Meantime, going into all those dark places under cupboards and behind things, it washed out numerous little inhabitants, the eightlegged kind, so I had a bit of a flood of red back spiders emerging too….. so….that just made it all the more fun. / Living dangerously …. Two hours later, aching back, wet feet, wet everydamnthing…. I drag out the carpets and furniture onto the back lawn, to see the bloody steer’s buddies in my back yard now, eating and shiiitting under my clothesline…. / Where’s the dog when you need her? / (oh of course, running under the house with the wet shoes I put outside to dry, isn’t she!) Then to the front verandah which now has broken boards and the scene of destruction where the clever beastie jumped off the verandah and took all the ceramic pots with him…..smasho! / How can one gentle animal create such a mess ….. (but I shan’t complain because this kind animal saved his bowel movement till he ran off down the track…..phew! mighty thoughtful…..) So…I tell you, next time you sit and indulge at Redbubble, bear in mind that life still goes on around you, and it can catch you up and overtake you in a big bad way if you are not watching…...it can even smash up the front of your house, crap at the back of it and flood everything in between…. but hey, / I came back to Redbubble didn’t I !!!
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These chaps are currently living the good life at a local farm, later in the year i will be enjoying their good living at one of our massive BBQ’s! Johnsons’ of Oldhurst Farm Butcher, check them out and try their produce, it’s fantastic quality.
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Visiting a cattle property out past Kilcoy, Andrew and I got up a little after 5am to be out photographing when the sun came up. / Climbing a hill, we saw a herd of horses grazing in the distance, then they all ran off. A few minutes later, we were greeted by this view coming over the hill accompanied by the thundering of hooves. They ran to us and we were surrounded by friendly, snuffling horses.
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This is your chance to get really close to nature by picking up this close up cow. A Corrie Kuipers Original Design.
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Rural Ontario Canada. The land is our future. Two, start a future together. One love and one dream. 125/ s at f/16 / ISo 200 / Canon D30
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cute lamb on grass in spring
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That’s her name, ask her again and she’ll tell you the same :) Yep that’s what the tag says on her ear. She must be extra special. She is a genuine Texas Longhorn, she has the horns to prove it :) Isn’t she grand??? I just took this today, August 11, 2008. Went out for a job interview, stopped back by and took more photos of these beauties. It’s a cloudy, overcast day here in Texas, 93 degrees with scattered thunderstorms in the forecast. Pray for rain, we need it.
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This is, what I think, is a majestic looking Highland Cow – I’m happy with everything about this photo; the composition, the expression and the pose; except for the light. It was gettig dark and that is the best I can do in the circumstances. I still think its an effective image and one of my favourites… It was taken on Baslow Edge in the Peak District last summer (July 2007).
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Delegate River Farm
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Waiting for the sun to set I decided to photograph this herd of cattle. I felt like I had interrupted some secret meeting… it was hardly a welcoming look from them. Notice the oddly marked cow in the middle of the herd. I didn’t notice him at the time, only when I uploaded to my computer. No photoshopping. / Rural Bluegrass Region of Kentucky USA A closer crop /
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Mountain pasture surrounded by Ponderosa Pine forest. N/W U.S.A.
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9×12 watercolor enhanced colored pencil on Arches satin finish paper. Original available. For any information on how I create this type of work please check out my journal for the “artwork in progress” pieces. Hereford cattle are a widely used breed in temperate areas, mainly for beef production. Originally from Herefordshire, England, they are found in the temperate parts of Australia while the breed also enjoys great popularity among ranchers in the desert American Southwest of the United States and also in the centre and east of Argentina and in Uruguay. There are more Hereford Breeders in New Zealand than any other beef cattle breeder. It is a testament to the hardiness of the breed that, while originating in cool, moist Britain, they have found great success, and indeed have thrived, in much harsher climates. The breed has adapted to a wide range of climates on nearly every continent. Hornless variants with the polled gene are known as the Polled Herefords. Breeding horned and hornless together functions as a genetic dehorner. This is often used as an alternative to a dehorning process, which causes stress and often weight loss. Closely related to the Miniature Hereford, the breed is known for its high-quality meat and its excellent maternal qualities. The Hereford’s temperament is more docile thus allowing easier handling than other cattle breeds. Its meat quality is very good, rivaling that of Angus, another “British Breed”, known for ‘marbling’ (intramuscular fat). The World Hereford Council is based in the UK, the Secretary General, Mrs. Jan Wills, is from New Zealand. There are currently 19 member countries comprised of 20 Hereford societies and 7 non-member countries with a total of eight societies. Hereford history / The Hereford breed originated in Britain perhaps as early as the seventeenth century. (information from Wikipedia) Complete 2008
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What more can I say, (‘xept I think it’s cute!)
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