
Wyoming Ranchers Accused Of Bleaching Penis Shapes Onto Neighbor’s Cows
A feud between Wyoming ranchers boiled over when a father and son allegedly marked a neighbor's errant cows with bleach, including drawing penis shapes on some of them.

Even if they are being sold in a short time, it is not like they were painting big 0 on the hip. We see cows painted like that coming to the sale now. It signifies that she pregged open.Sometimes you just have to be creative to get the point across. Not sure how they get charged with felony property destruction when the bleached hair will grow out in a few months, but I can see the diminution in value if they planned to sell them in the next month or so.
Might make them worth more...Sometimes you just have to be creative to get the point across. Not sure how they get charged with felony property destruction when the bleached hair will grow out in a few months, but I can see the diminution in value if they planned to sell them in the next month or so.
In SD I was told that landowners were responsible for the right half of any shared fence. I never spoke to anyone with any legal authority about it, but then I never had fence problems with neighbors.If Wyoming is like most other western states if you don't want critters coming on to your property you are responsible for fencing them out. I know that is flat out the law here in Oregon. It has been taken to court a time or three and the law holds.
That may or may not have happened here once. Burdizzo...I have been known to tell neighbors that if they were going to run a bull, it was their responsibility to keep him off my property - I have said that they might get a steer back!
Your fence has to meet the statutory definition of a "legal fence", which requires minimum spacing between posts, number of wires and space between wires. If an animal breaches it, then landowner can impound and start imposing a feed lien if it comes to that point. There is also a statutory process for building or rebuilding shared boundary fences.If Wyoming is like most other western states if you don't want critters coming on to your property you are responsible for fencing them out. I know that is flat out the law here in Oregon. It has been taken to court a time or three and the law holds.
Unless it's a county thing here, the State has no such definitions except those fences running along side a US highway or State highway. Even those are pretty vague. Farm to market and ranch roads aren't recognized and there's over 40,000 miles of FM roads here. Texas, by statute, is still open range, but all except about 20 counties (out of 254 counties) have opted for a stock law.Your fence has to meet the statutory definition of a "legal fence", which requires minimum spacing between posts, number of wires and space between wires. If an animal breaches it, then landowner can impound and start imposing a feed lien if it comes to that point. There is also a statutory process for building or rebuilding shared boundary fences.