Free: Contests & Raffles.
a rag horn to me is a small branch antler bull that is either imature or of poor genetics, makes no difference the point count
Holy crap, and all this time I thought a raghorn was any bull from the Middle East.
A 2 year old bull is a raghorn in my book. Most typically a small 3,4, or 5 point, I've seen a few 5x6 and 6x6, and one 6x7 raghorn. So I'll disagree with JDB to the extent I don't consider a mature bull with inferior antler development a raghorn. It is about age, not points. I'm sure there are regional differences, based on typical antler growth for the area. In herds where yearling bulls commonly grow branched antlers, I consider those 2-pt yearlings or 3-pt yearlings - not raghorns.
Quote from: DOUBLELUNG on December 06, 2009, 09:57:20 AMI have seen bulls that I would consider raghorns and satelites playing the part of a herd bull.We have seen a lot of that in the Blues too, but it is usually early in the rut. You see a lot of raghorn, 5x5 and first-year-six "herd bulls" out there pushing good sized harems. After a bit we figured it out. None of the cows had come in to heat yet. The "big, old guys" let the youngsters do all the work gathering up the herd, and they act like satalite bulls, stealing a cow if one does happen to come into heat early. Then, as more and more cows start coming in season, one by one the young bulls start losing their harems to the "real" herd bulls....I think there's a lesson there about old bulls, and young bulls, and age and treachery....but I haven't figured it out yet...
I have seen bulls that I would consider raghorns and satelites playing the part of a herd bull.