We have been breeding all the dairy heifers- to our new Red Angus bull for the last 3 years... and I think we will be finally keeping some of those heifers to try out as beef cows. We used a Shorthorn bull for the last 3 years (when we moved on from him, we weighed 28 or 2900 at the sale barn), and during the last year, we kept a son from him to use on the old cows. We just shipped him to move on a few months ago. So, I'd say about 85% of the heifers that have been getting bred to the RA bull, have been either half, 3/4, or full blooded M.S.. I too, have really liked the body type, design, and udder structure on these daughters of the old bull- and think they could click neatly with the beef shorthorns. Yes, they are getting milked though, although it's not uncommon for the light milking ones to get kicked out with the beef cows! (lol) I'll post some more pictures when I can get time. Our dairy herd spends most of their time on pasture, especially the heifers.. so grass diet wouldn't be much different...
As far as the dual purpose heritage of these cattle... I'm not 100% on. I know that they guy who got us started in MS, used to dual register everything (beef and dairy), and kinda fell away from the beef side of things about the early 90s. Off the top of my head, the Innisfail herd prefix sticks out- not sure if they were beef, dual, or milking.. or what they were. I'm going to check with the ASA, and see what the requirements are for double registering them, and I'm going to try to re-register some of the thicker ones, mainly to try and get the Durham Red heifer calves that we are keeping back for beef cows, and see how that would work out. We are selling the Jersey x RA cross calves, and retaining the MSx RA calves, and a few RAx Hol, and maybe 1 RAx BS.
If I had more pasture, I would convert and breed many more of these cows over to beef bulls... I bet Grandpa would flip though if he found out!
I know this is liikely going to be just like throwing a snowball into a drift... but you never know what might happen!
ps... to whoever saw the clean udder in the sloppy lot.. the lot's not actually that dirty- I'd say it's got less than an inch of slop on the concrete, since it gets cleaned daily or every other.