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please tear up this bull
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<blockquote data-quote="Kent" data-source="post: 176359" data-attributes="member: 2134"><p>My Grandpa used to tell me about the time he had 20 acres of ryegrass and crimson clover planted for his heifers to graze. He would run them on it for a half hour twice a day, then run them off. Well, the heifers broke out while he was at work and got into the clover patch. When he got home, he had 20 heifers stretched out on their sides with their eyes rolled back in their heads, all about to pop.</p><p></p><p>He didn't have time to call the vet as it takes 30 minutes for him to get there. So he took a big knife from the kitchen and a bottle of iodine. He stabbed every one of them in the side and twisted the knife to let the gas escape, then poured iodine on the wound. No stitches. Every one of them got up within ten minutes or so and all of them lived. I kid you not.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Kent, post: 176359, member: 2134"] My Grandpa used to tell me about the time he had 20 acres of ryegrass and crimson clover planted for his heifers to graze. He would run them on it for a half hour twice a day, then run them off. Well, the heifers broke out while he was at work and got into the clover patch. When he got home, he had 20 heifers stretched out on their sides with their eyes rolled back in their heads, all about to pop. He didn't have time to call the vet as it takes 30 minutes for him to get there. So he took a big knife from the kitchen and a bottle of iodine. He stabbed every one of them in the side and twisted the knife to let the gas escape, then poured iodine on the wound. No stitches. Every one of them got up within ten minutes or so and all of them lived. I kid you not. [/QUOTE]
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