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Interesting longhorn read
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<blockquote data-quote="Warren Allison" data-source="post: 1794912" data-attributes="member: 40587"><p>30 on 70 acres in the south, you won't need any thing other than salt and minerals, then. Biggest capital outlay will be your working facility. Our corral is an old portable rodeo arena, 7' tall, heavy duty portable panels. We are never on foot or any kind of motorized vehicle ( 4 wheeler, side x side etc), everything is done horseback. You will probably want to do that too, and you know how to do it. Most Corrs you get around here will most likely been roped or used to raise ropers, and wil be used to being handled with horses. LH, Pineywoods, and Fla Cracker or Scrub cattle work just as well as Corrs, but hardly any of them are " horse broke" and lots of them are about half wild when you get them. Having a working pen or corral that they can't jump or run through, will help when you start getting them used to the horses. We still have the return, chute and header and heeler boxes in ours, in case we want to do some roping practice ever once in a while. But rarely do.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Warren Allison, post: 1794912, member: 40587"] 30 on 70 acres in the south, you won't need any thing other than salt and minerals, then. Biggest capital outlay will be your working facility. Our corral is an old portable rodeo arena, 7' tall, heavy duty portable panels. We are never on foot or any kind of motorized vehicle ( 4 wheeler, side x side etc), everything is done horseback. You will probably want to do that too, and you know how to do it. Most Corrs you get around here will most likely been roped or used to raise ropers, and wil be used to being handled with horses. LH, Pineywoods, and Fla Cracker or Scrub cattle work just as well as Corrs, but hardly any of them are " horse broke" and lots of them are about half wild when you get them. Having a working pen or corral that they can't jump or run through, will help when you start getting them used to the horses. We still have the return, chute and header and heeler boxes in ours, in case we want to do some roping practice ever once in a while. But rarely do. [/QUOTE]
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