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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
Horrible way to lose a cow
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<blockquote data-quote="Nesikep" data-source="post: 1485426" data-attributes="member: 9096"><p>I know a guy who drove over his St Bernard with his backhoe.. needed a bunch of work done to him but he survived it.</p><p>My bull was bad at my friends place.. you couldn't run him over with a bale, he'd just be there fighting the heck out of it.</p><p></p><p>I have never hit a live deer or fawn in my hay fields, on two occasions I've hit fawns that were already dead.. One of them was near a fence, no idea why it was dead.. second one was really young too, a few rounds later I found momma eaten up.. I'm guessing she had twins and one wasn't positioned correctly and it killed her.. had I hayed a day or two earlier I'd probably have had a bottle baby.</p><p>We have a lot of grouse here, don't hit the adults often but you can't get around hitting some of the chicks.. same with meadowlarks</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Nesikep, post: 1485426, member: 9096"] I know a guy who drove over his St Bernard with his backhoe.. needed a bunch of work done to him but he survived it. My bull was bad at my friends place.. you couldn't run him over with a bale, he'd just be there fighting the heck out of it. I have never hit a live deer or fawn in my hay fields, on two occasions I've hit fawns that were already dead.. One of them was near a fence, no idea why it was dead.. second one was really young too, a few rounds later I found momma eaten up.. I'm guessing she had twins and one wasn't positioned correctly and it killed her.. had I hayed a day or two earlier I'd probably have had a bottle baby. We have a lot of grouse here, don't hit the adults often but you can't get around hitting some of the chicks.. same with meadowlarks [/QUOTE]
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Horrible way to lose a cow
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