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<blockquote data-quote="cow pollinater" data-source="post: 1402459" data-attributes="member: 14661"><p>I think I've told this story before but my neighbor on one of my valley pastures back in CA was big time into rescue dogs. She got a bad bunch that she couldn't handle. I told her shooting them was a last resort but that was the pasture I kept my heifers and registered cows in to AI and the dogs had them pretty stirred up. </p><p>I went to the sale and bought a rank old broken mouth salers-ish looking cow with a set of daggers on her head and a three day old calf that tried to kill the ring man and dumped her out with my cattle. About three days later I was looking at cattle and saw a rescued rottweiler with leash still attatched limp around my fenceline to get to the other side where he headed off in his original direction. :lol: She wasn't bad once the calf got a little older but her tolerance for BS was about zero.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cow pollinater, post: 1402459, member: 14661"] I think I've told this story before but my neighbor on one of my valley pastures back in CA was big time into rescue dogs. She got a bad bunch that she couldn't handle. I told her shooting them was a last resort but that was the pasture I kept my heifers and registered cows in to AI and the dogs had them pretty stirred up. I went to the sale and bought a rank old broken mouth salers-ish looking cow with a set of daggers on her head and a three day old calf that tried to kill the ring man and dumped her out with my cattle. About three days later I was looking at cattle and saw a rescued rottweiler with leash still attatched limp around my fenceline to get to the other side where he headed off in his original direction. :lol: She wasn't bad once the calf got a little older but her tolerance for BS was about zero. [/QUOTE]
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