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Need help with a frisky young Bull
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<blockquote data-quote="3waycross" data-source="post: 555428" data-attributes="member: 6713"><p>Sounds like he needs 2 things in no particular order.</p><p></p><p>He needs his a$$ whipped like there is no tomorrow, and maybe more than once. He should look at you for the rest of his life and know you're the guy that did him good. Did that to my buddies Gelbvieh bull 2 yrs ago for jumping fences and when he squared up on me I beat the livin crap out of him. After that he would jump the nearest fence when he saw my truck coming, just in case, and never tried me again.</p><p></p><p>The other thing he probably needs is some company. I'd be willing to bet he was better or actually Ok when he had some company. I have seen recently just how crazy some cattle get when kept alone. Especially Bulls. Even if it's just a steer get him a friend, at least the steer will benefit from the high growth diet and you can eat him when you're done raisin the bull.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="3waycross, post: 555428, member: 6713"] Sounds like he needs 2 things in no particular order. He needs his a$$ whipped like there is no tomorrow, and maybe more than once. He should look at you for the rest of his life and know you're the guy that did him good. Did that to my buddies Gelbvieh bull 2 yrs ago for jumping fences and when he squared up on me I beat the livin crap out of him. After that he would jump the nearest fence when he saw my truck coming, just in case, and never tried me again. The other thing he probably needs is some company. I'd be willing to bet he was better or actually Ok when he had some company. I have seen recently just how crazy some cattle get when kept alone. Especially Bulls. Even if it's just a steer get him a friend, at least the steer will benefit from the high growth diet and you can eat him when you're done raisin the bull. [/QUOTE]
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Need help with a frisky young Bull
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