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Personal farm related injuries
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<blockquote data-quote="regolith" data-source="post: 1048843" data-attributes="member: 9267"><p>Noted the irony...</p><p></p><p>One broken wrist, both thumbs. Been dairy farming twenty years. Currently in the process of losing a finger nail that I bashed pretty hard in April; fifteen years ago lost a toe nail loading sand off a truck into a wheelbarrow... couple of little kids were swinging the truck tailgate for fun, wasn't fun when it landed on my toe.</p><p></p><p>Two of the injuries were caused by cows I was managing for someone else, the third was one of my own cows that had been leased out to a farm with a rotary shed and panicked when I got her back and put her in a herringbone shed for the first time. Injuries to date from cattle I both own and manage... zero.</p><p>I think that there is a very good argument for owning placid cattle.</p><p></p><p>Anyone tried cutting off the loose, black part of an injured nail? I reckon it's going to take another month for the attached half to grow out if it's left alone.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="regolith, post: 1048843, member: 9267"] Noted the irony... One broken wrist, both thumbs. Been dairy farming twenty years. Currently in the process of losing a finger nail that I bashed pretty hard in April; fifteen years ago lost a toe nail loading sand off a truck into a wheelbarrow... couple of little kids were swinging the truck tailgate for fun, wasn't fun when it landed on my toe. Two of the injuries were caused by cows I was managing for someone else, the third was one of my own cows that had been leased out to a farm with a rotary shed and panicked when I got her back and put her in a herringbone shed for the first time. Injuries to date from cattle I both own and manage... zero. I think that there is a very good argument for owning placid cattle. Anyone tried cutting off the loose, black part of an injured nail? I reckon it's going to take another month for the attached half to grow out if it's left alone. [/QUOTE]
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