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Horn banding - pics
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<blockquote data-quote="Bigfoot" data-source="post: 1285874" data-attributes="member: 17956"><p>It's been a long time, since I raised a calf with horns. I have bought a blue jillion of them with horns. 99 times out of 100, I just use my barnes dehorners. I then cordarize the wound. IMHO, banding horns compared to conventional dehorning, the banding is far less painful. Certainly more bloodless. P poor management, I let this set horns get away, and I had been wanting to band some. I have done goats in the past, but not cattle. I'll have to see how this works, but for now I like it a lot.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bigfoot, post: 1285874, member: 17956"] It's been a long time, since I raised a calf with horns. I have bought a blue jillion of them with horns. 99 times out of 100, I just use my barnes dehorners. I then cordarize the wound. IMHO, banding horns compared to conventional dehorning, the banding is far less painful. Certainly more bloodless. P poor management, I let this set horns get away, and I had been wanting to band some. I have done goats in the past, but not cattle. I'll have to see how this works, but for now I like it a lot. [/QUOTE]
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