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The bull whose semen is worth $3,000

Yuvraj is a great looking creature with oiled in reverse bending horns, a smooth dark coat and a thin, shaggy tail. He weighs 450kg (990lbs), is 10ft long and 5ft 8in tall. He is likewise used to consideration – and marginally hateful of his most recent admirers. "Consistently some individual or alternate comes to see him. He's not simply one more bull, he's an image," says his pleased proprietor, Karamveer Singh, a 47-year-old third era agriculturist in Haryana state. Singh lives in the town of Sunarion in an area – Kurukshetra – eminent as where a legendary fight was battled in India's best-known epic, the Mahabharata. All things considered, it is among the numerous towns in India where limits amongst city and farmland are obscuring quick: prosperous agriculturists live in vast, all around selected homes. A large number of their kids, original undergrads, are enlisted in remote colleges. The persevering rancher Singh possesses a group of two dozen dairy animals and wild oxen, maintains a business and arrangements in property. He lives with his significant other, about six autos and tractors and an entourage of family unit workers. One of his children is examining for a MBA in Australia; the other is considering software engineering in Rajasthan. Be that as it may, Yuvraj, named after an Indian cricket star, is his most prized ownership. He's a Murrah bull – the best of the 13 perceived wild ox breeds in India – and a money bovine if at any time there was one. Inderjeet Singh, head of India's Central Institute for Research on Buffaloes depicts Yuvraj as a "champion rearing bull".

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