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Cattle Boards
Breeding / Calving Issues
Cow Attacking her calf
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<blockquote data-quote="Nesikep" data-source="post: 1125675" data-attributes="member: 9096"><p>I find some cow families didn't get any locktite on their screws and are more prone to losing them! I have a bunch that are tame for all anyone would notice, but I don't trust at all, especially at calving time. Others are just morons that never understand what you want them to do... or do the opposite deliberately.. we've weeded most of them out now thankfully.</p><p>Other families of cows are reliably docile, and do what you ask of them without fussing about it.</p><p></p><p>I got worried about one of my big cows last year, she's close to 2000 lbs, had her calf, and was just overly excited about it, she was licking it, so that was all good, but so aggressively she was rolling it around and yes, nearly throwing it in the air... it all worked out in the end.</p><p></p><p>I would have done the same with Orphan Annie's mother.. no use keeping one like that...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Nesikep, post: 1125675, member: 9096"] I find some cow families didn't get any locktite on their screws and are more prone to losing them! I have a bunch that are tame for all anyone would notice, but I don't trust at all, especially at calving time. Others are just morons that never understand what you want them to do... or do the opposite deliberately.. we've weeded most of them out now thankfully. Other families of cows are reliably docile, and do what you ask of them without fussing about it. I got worried about one of my big cows last year, she's close to 2000 lbs, had her calf, and was just overly excited about it, she was licking it, so that was all good, but so aggressively she was rolling it around and yes, nearly throwing it in the air... it all worked out in the end. I would have done the same with Orphan Annie's mother.. no use keeping one like that... [/QUOTE]
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Cow Attacking her calf
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