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Best way to use a Hot Shot
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<blockquote data-quote="cow pollinater" data-source="post: 1018995" data-attributes="member: 14661"><p>I carry two in the truck and have a spare next to every chute. I like to work cows fast and quiet and I've learned that the best way to do that is to be ready for whatever they hand you before they hand it to you. Most of my cows get slapped on the butt and that's about it. Anything gentle that doesn't go with that will get a few dry pokes followed by a quick zap and after a while they learn to move when poked and they stay gentle but move when you want. Goofy crap that want's to act stupid gets a clear message to do what I want the first time around because the more time they get to think and build up steam the harder it gets and the more stuff they tear up... It's best just to shove them on through and not give them time to get to worked up. To them that hotshot is child's play. </p><p>The problem that you run into with using one to keep a bull out of your space is that he learns to respect IT and maybe not YOU. I've had good luck using one to keep them out of my face but last year I had a bull that wanted to run up and fight when I fed. He got to where as long as I had a hotshot or a dog he'd leave me alone but if I tried to feed without either of the above he'd come after me... I wish I would have put him up in a corner and beat the crap out of him the first time he made a run at me which was at about three hundred pounds.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cow pollinater, post: 1018995, member: 14661"] I carry two in the truck and have a spare next to every chute. I like to work cows fast and quiet and I've learned that the best way to do that is to be ready for whatever they hand you before they hand it to you. Most of my cows get slapped on the butt and that's about it. Anything gentle that doesn't go with that will get a few dry pokes followed by a quick zap and after a while they learn to move when poked and they stay gentle but move when you want. Goofy crap that want's to act stupid gets a clear message to do what I want the first time around because the more time they get to think and build up steam the harder it gets and the more stuff they tear up... It's best just to shove them on through and not give them time to get to worked up. To them that hotshot is child's play. The problem that you run into with using one to keep a bull out of your space is that he learns to respect IT and maybe not YOU. I've had good luck using one to keep them out of my face but last year I had a bull that wanted to run up and fight when I fed. He got to where as long as I had a hotshot or a dog he'd leave me alone but if I tried to feed without either of the above he'd come after me... I wish I would have put him up in a corner and beat the crap out of him the first time he made a run at me which was at about three hundred pounds. [/QUOTE]
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