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Cattle Boards
Got Milk?
My new baby, Molly
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<blockquote data-quote="farmerjan" data-source="post: 1765140" data-attributes="member: 25884"><p>[USER=8202]@Lannie[/USER] just been reading up on "miss Molly" and her getting out with the neighbors cattle and the bull.... The bull may very well have done some of the damage if she was in heat and sidling up to the fence with him on the other side. Then she might have just followed him over if he got in your field first. Doesn't negate the damage, but might explain why there were several sections. </p><p>No reason to not let the heifer (if she has one and not a bull/steer) stay on her longer also so that she can take care of the milking if the weather gets too fierce. She ought to be dropping off in production anyway, so she might get a little more roly-poly with the milk for so long, but it won't kill her... And you can milk as much as you can as long as the weather cooperates.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="farmerjan, post: 1765140, member: 25884"] [USER=8202]@Lannie[/USER] just been reading up on "miss Molly" and her getting out with the neighbors cattle and the bull.... The bull may very well have done some of the damage if she was in heat and sidling up to the fence with him on the other side. Then she might have just followed him over if he got in your field first. Doesn't negate the damage, but might explain why there were several sections. No reason to not let the heifer (if she has one and not a bull/steer) stay on her longer also so that she can take care of the milking if the weather gets too fierce. She ought to be dropping off in production anyway, so she might get a little more roly-poly with the milk for so long, but it won't kill her... And you can milk as much as you can as long as the weather cooperates. [/QUOTE]
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Got Milk?
My new baby, Molly
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