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Fence jumpers - need advice
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<blockquote data-quote="sudonsan" data-source="post: 1072340" data-attributes="member: 20486"><p>My husband and I are fairly new to cattle and have a serious problem for which advice from those who know is needed and appreciated.</p><p></p><p>We purchased some purebred longhorns 5 years ago - and decided to switch to registered about a year ago. We were pretty sure that our purebred bull was infertile [as we'd had no calves] but decided to get him fertility tested to make certain he could not impregnate our registered. Penned him - he jumped out of the pen.</p><p></p><p>Hired someone to rope and band him.</p><p></p><p>Moving our purebreds to a new property. Hadn't tried to pen or load him but had him in a separate pasture [with a heifer and a calf] from the other cattle.</p><p></p><p>Went out today - he'd jumped back in [pulling down the top wire] and the other two followed him.</p><p></p><p>We've come to terms with removing him, but now we can't find a processor who can handle his horns [much less the fence jumping] so wondering what to do.</p><p></p><p>Thinking, since it is finally getting cooler in Texas, we may have to shoot him ourselves, and field dress [my husband has field dressed deer, me nothing] but thinking this is a major task? Any thoughts on how to proceed?</p><p></p><p>Now, the heifer is pregnant and we had planned to sell her - but hesitate now that she has jumped - to pass that on to someone else. Thinking after we wean her calf, processing her - again probably us having to field dress.</p><p></p><p>The calf is already being raised to process so he won't be someone else's problem, and his horns won't be an issue due to age.</p><p></p><p>Thanks for any information!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="sudonsan, post: 1072340, member: 20486"] My husband and I are fairly new to cattle and have a serious problem for which advice from those who know is needed and appreciated. We purchased some purebred longhorns 5 years ago - and decided to switch to registered about a year ago. We were pretty sure that our purebred bull was infertile [as we'd had no calves] but decided to get him fertility tested to make certain he could not impregnate our registered. Penned him - he jumped out of the pen. Hired someone to rope and band him. Moving our purebreds to a new property. Hadn't tried to pen or load him but had him in a separate pasture [with a heifer and a calf] from the other cattle. Went out today - he'd jumped back in [pulling down the top wire] and the other two followed him. We've come to terms with removing him, but now we can't find a processor who can handle his horns [much less the fence jumping] so wondering what to do. Thinking, since it is finally getting cooler in Texas, we may have to shoot him ourselves, and field dress [my husband has field dressed deer, me nothing] but thinking this is a major task? Any thoughts on how to proceed? Now, the heifer is pregnant and we had planned to sell her - but hesitate now that she has jumped - to pass that on to someone else. Thinking after we wean her calf, processing her - again probably us having to field dress. The calf is already being raised to process so he won't be someone else's problem, and his horns won't be an issue due to age. Thanks for any information! [/QUOTE]
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