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breaking cattle
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<blockquote data-quote="greybeard" data-source="post: 1193664" data-attributes="member: 18945"><p>I saw the same thing done with a mean old Simmental bull that was bad about tearing up anything he could push his head against, and wouldn't let you touch him for nothing but they didn't halter him. Just tied a big heavy log chain on his neck, with a big tractor tire on the other end about 30'. He drug that big old tire all over the place as he grazed--over to the hay rack, out to the water trough--even did his doin with the cows with that chain on. 2-3 weeks later they turned him loose and after that, you could walk up to him with a string, tie it round his neck and lead him anywhere you wanted and he never pushed anything else down. Come to think of it, that was a log skidder tire they used.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="greybeard, post: 1193664, member: 18945"] I saw the same thing done with a mean old Simmental bull that was bad about tearing up anything he could push his head against, and wouldn't let you touch him for nothing but they didn't halter him. Just tied a big heavy log chain on his neck, with a big tractor tire on the other end about 30'. He drug that big old tire all over the place as he grazed--over to the hay rack, out to the water trough--even did his doin with the cows with that chain on. 2-3 weeks later they turned him loose and after that, you could walk up to him with a string, tie it round his neck and lead him anywhere you wanted and he never pushed anything else down. Come to think of it, that was a log skidder tire they used. [/QUOTE]
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