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Cutting a longhorns horn
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<blockquote data-quote="Hippie Rancher" data-source="post: 1575860" data-attributes="member: 4203"><p>my experience is they may look that way, but longhorns are lithe and agile like cats, they just gracefully hold their heads sideways and slip right on through. try running her through for feed a few times and not catching her, see if she can actually do it when she is motivated.</p><p></p><p>also if they really don't fit, and you need to work them you can just tie them by the horns...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hippie Rancher, post: 1575860, member: 4203"] my experience is they may look that way, but longhorns are lithe and agile like cats, they just gracefully hold their heads sideways and slip right on through. try running her through for feed a few times and not catching her, see if she can actually do it when she is motivated. also if they really don't fit, and you need to work them you can just tie them by the horns... [/QUOTE]
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Cutting a longhorns horn
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