Who We Are
Bullis
Creek Ranch is owned and operated by Quentin and Anita Brawner and
son Rob and his wife Brenda and family. The ranch is located in
the Sandhills of North Central Nebraska. We are south of Wood Lake,
a small town along Highway 20 between Valentine and Ainsworth, Nebraska.
Our family has been raising cattle for many generations. The original
family farm is located in Delevan, Illinois. Robs dad Quentin
raised Registered Polled Herefords for many years along with commercial
cattle. In the late 1960s Angus bulls were used on the Hereford
cowherd. Quentin realized the benefits of crossbreeding and looking
to the future began to investigate the new continental beef breeds
that were coming into North America via artificial insemination.
After trying different breeds, Limousin was identified as being
the best suited for our operation and environment. They fit our
management scheme very well. We found Limousin cattle to be very
easy calving and vigorous at birth which was a necessity as the
cowherd was calved out in the foothills in rugged country where
it was next to impossible to keep watch over them during calving.
Our calving pasture was comprised of three sections of unfenced
tree covered terrain with deep draws and steep hills.
Quentin also foresaw the need for a breed that would increase
meat yield and beef production. Limousin did this better than any
other breed while remaining moderate sized, were winter hardy and
very good forage converters.
At this point in time there were virtually no Limousin genetics
available so A.I. was the only option as a way to utilize these
new genetics. On a large scale this was impractical due to the terrain
and pasture size so a small purebred herd was started to produce
bulls for use in a majority of the cowherd. One thing led to the
next as the purebred herd grew we soon had neighbors and area cattleman
interested in buying Limousin seed stock from us. With this the
cowherd grew to its present size of 150 females.
In the early 1990s Red Angus was used A.I. on the commercial
replacement heifers that were by this time fairly high percentage
Limousin. This cross-worked very well and Red Angus proved to have
very predictable "necessity traits" such as calving ease,
growth, mothering ability and moderate mature size. Red Angus also
has excellent carcass traits that complemented our Limousin base.
In keeping with what we have always told our bull customers "if
you have used more than 2 generations of one breed, you need to
switch breeds to take advantage of heterosis." So in 1994 it
seemed logical to start a purebred herd of Red Angus to provide
genetics for not only our commercial herd but for our bull customers
as well. We decided that it would be advantageous to start out with
100% 1A breeding stock. We have incorporated seedstock from some
of the best herds in the US and Canada for our foundation. The commitment
was made to buy the best, so it has been a slow process getting
started with a limited budget. We have always felt that quality
was #1 not quantity.

" Then " January 23,1902 Load of Shorthorn
steers and heifers bred and raised by Henry Brawner, age 89, Delevan,
Il. Average weight 1577 lbs., price $7.25 per hundredweight, .70
cents higher than any other cattle sold that day. Yielded 67.2 dressing
percent.

"Now " The cowherd grazes on native sandhills pasture
with minimal inputs.
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