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<blockquote data-quote="mlazyj" data-source="post: 882880" data-attributes="member: 17406"><p>Trailing cattle isn't that tough , he looks like he's got 125 head or so with big calves should be fairly easy . The big thing is to remember you have all day . If it's going to be hot ,get going early so you don't stress the calves to bad . Put your cattle in a pile and start them going , cattle have to be trained to trail right , you don't let cows quit you and trail off on there own you run them back in the herd they need to know that's were they belong . What Dylan does by stopping at each gate and pairing them back up is a must , If you start skipping that especialy if you are moving young pairs , you'll have more bums then you know what to with . Leave the 4 wheelers at home , they're noisy , they stink and they don't go calf speed .</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mlazyj, post: 882880, member: 17406"] Trailing cattle isn't that tough , he looks like he's got 125 head or so with big calves should be fairly easy . The big thing is to remember you have all day . If it's going to be hot ,get going early so you don't stress the calves to bad . Put your cattle in a pile and start them going , cattle have to be trained to trail right , you don't let cows quit you and trail off on there own you run them back in the herd they need to know that's were they belong . What Dylan does by stopping at each gate and pairing them back up is a must , If you start skipping that especialy if you are moving young pairs , you'll have more bums then you know what to with . Leave the 4 wheelers at home , they're noisy , they stink and they don't go calf speed . [/QUOTE]
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