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<blockquote data-quote="John SD" data-source="post: 1272812" data-attributes="member: 14713"><p>Agree with all the above. After the bull's foot heals and you observe the appropriate antibitiotic withdrawl period, send him down the road. Likely if his foot is bad enough it needs treatment it will never fully heal properly and will cause trouble again down the road. </p><p></p><p> While I can understand a bull in pain most always has a very sour attitude, I have zero tolerance for aggressive bad disposition in a bull or any animal for that matter. All bulls naturally get worse dispositions as they age. </p><p></p><p> I have sold bulls I might have got a couple more years of service out of them, but didn't want to put up with them anymore. Although his sire and dam are mellow, you don't want this particular bull's attititude carrying through to his daughters.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="John SD, post: 1272812, member: 14713"] Agree with all the above. After the bull's foot heals and you observe the appropriate antibitiotic withdrawl period, send him down the road. Likely if his foot is bad enough it needs treatment it will never fully heal properly and will cause trouble again down the road. While I can understand a bull in pain most always has a very sour attitude, I have zero tolerance for aggressive bad disposition in a bull or any animal for that matter. All bulls naturally get worse dispositions as they age. I have sold bulls I might have got a couple more years of service out of them, but didn't want to put up with them anymore. Although his sire and dam are mellow, you don't want this particular bull's attititude carrying through to his daughters. [/QUOTE]
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