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Pregnant yearling heifer
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<blockquote data-quote="Katpau" data-source="post: 1762755" data-attributes="member: 9933"><p>[ATTACH=full]20537[/ATTACH]</p><p>Here is #1820 at 4 years. We will be weaning her 4th calf in a few days, and then I am afraid her time with us will come to an end. She learned that she was bigger and stronger than me this Spring and now she will have to go. She has raised 4 calves, including the one we pulled out of her when she was not quite 13 months old. That one we helped at first. We were a bit rough pulling that one, since we assumed it was dead and wanted to get it out of the cow right away. The calf took a few days to stand, but she recovered and was raised on the cow out with the rest of the herd. I liked this cow so much, I had decided to AI her and keep a replacement from her. That plan changed in February. </p><p></p><p>Apparently she did not appreciate our saving her life as much as I had hoped. We were checking for new calves when we found her standing on a small cow trail on the side of a steep hill with her newborn. It was an awkward spot to get to with little room to stand. I made the decision to stay holding on to the calf while my husband climbed back uphill to the ATV for iodine, eartag and the scale. She had always been standoffish and a little afraid of us, but she is a good Mom and refused to move back away from the calf in spite of my offering a flake of alfalfa I had carried with me. We were entirely too close and she kept bobbing her head at me. Finally she got her nerve up and picked me up with her head and tossed me down the hill. Now she knows I'm afraid and that she has the power. I am too old for this, so she will have to go. I often walk right through the middle of the herd checking numbers and looking at eyes for signs of pinkeye. I don't want to always be looking out for her. I can't say she has ever come at anyone, but I feel like she looks at me with an arrogance now that says "I got your number you big chicken". Whenever I accidentally walk up close and make eye contact, she will give a little head nod. I immediately look away and walk off trying to make it look like I never intended to go right past her, but she knows I'm afraid. I can almost hear her saying "Yeah, I didn't think so".</p><p></p><p>Anyone interested in a Registered Angus cow bred for late February-March real cheap? <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite1" alt=":)" title="Smile :)" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":)" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Katpau, post: 1762755, member: 9933"] [ATTACH type="full" alt="8DFBC564-5D0B-47C6-8349-6DF346DEF0C3_1_105_c.jpeg"]20537[/ATTACH] Here is #1820 at 4 years. We will be weaning her 4th calf in a few days, and then I am afraid her time with us will come to an end. She learned that she was bigger and stronger than me this Spring and now she will have to go. She has raised 4 calves, including the one we pulled out of her when she was not quite 13 months old. That one we helped at first. We were a bit rough pulling that one, since we assumed it was dead and wanted to get it out of the cow right away. The calf took a few days to stand, but she recovered and was raised on the cow out with the rest of the herd. I liked this cow so much, I had decided to AI her and keep a replacement from her. That plan changed in February. Apparently she did not appreciate our saving her life as much as I had hoped. We were checking for new calves when we found her standing on a small cow trail on the side of a steep hill with her newborn. It was an awkward spot to get to with little room to stand. I made the decision to stay holding on to the calf while my husband climbed back uphill to the ATV for iodine, eartag and the scale. She had always been standoffish and a little afraid of us, but she is a good Mom and refused to move back away from the calf in spite of my offering a flake of alfalfa I had carried with me. We were entirely too close and she kept bobbing her head at me. Finally she got her nerve up and picked me up with her head and tossed me down the hill. Now she knows I'm afraid and that she has the power. I am too old for this, so she will have to go. I often walk right through the middle of the herd checking numbers and looking at eyes for signs of pinkeye. I don't want to always be looking out for her. I can't say she has ever come at anyone, but I feel like she looks at me with an arrogance now that says "I got your number you big chicken". Whenever I accidentally walk up close and make eye contact, she will give a little head nod. I immediately look away and walk off trying to make it look like I never intended to go right past her, but she knows I'm afraid. I can almost hear her saying "Yeah, I didn't think so". Anyone interested in a Registered Angus cow bred for late February-March real cheap? :) [/QUOTE]
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