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<blockquote data-quote="Twisted" data-source="post: 1846427" data-attributes="member: 43517"><p>I bought 5 registered bred Lowline heifers in 2010. They were a little jumpy when we were loading them up, high headed bunch, but I likened it to strangers and the crappy corral and alley that made more racket than a bull in a china shop. I got in late that night and I put some hay and water in the trailer and kept them in there till the next morning so they would settle down some. The next morning when I opened the gate on the stock trailer, the first one out ran strait for the 5 ft corral fence, cleared it, and kept going, nose pointed toward Jupiter. I knew that I had screwed up. She finally came back that afternoon, guess she felt lonely, and flat footed cleared that corral fence again to get to the other 4. Long story after that but I wound up trading the last 2 for hay equipment.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Twisted, post: 1846427, member: 43517"] I bought 5 registered bred Lowline heifers in 2010. They were a little jumpy when we were loading them up, high headed bunch, but I likened it to strangers and the crappy corral and alley that made more racket than a bull in a china shop. I got in late that night and I put some hay and water in the trailer and kept them in there till the next morning so they would settle down some. The next morning when I opened the gate on the stock trailer, the first one out ran strait for the 5 ft corral fence, cleared it, and kept going, nose pointed toward Jupiter. I knew that I had screwed up. She finally came back that afternoon, guess she felt lonely, and flat footed cleared that corral fence again to get to the other 4. Long story after that but I wound up trading the last 2 for hay equipment. [/QUOTE]
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