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<blockquote data-quote="dun" data-source="post: 155403" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>We've had the same experience with animals from places that genreally only work the cattle by horseback or 4wheeler and are hoorahed too much when they're first exposed. The only cows we've ever had that seriously tried to kill me was a Brangus that had been brought in from the range and tranqed, one was a weanling Hereford heifer that thought I'ld loo kbetter squeezed through the corral, the other was a Red Angus Gelbvieh cross. She was the only nut case we got from those people. Her sire was too layed back, to get him to stand so I could get a look at him I finally had to have the owner twist his tail and I slapped him in the face with my cap. </p><p>You run into loonys in every breed, but a lot of it has to do with how they;re handled originally.</p><p></p><p>dun</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dun, post: 155403, member: 34"] We've had the same experience with animals from places that genreally only work the cattle by horseback or 4wheeler and are hoorahed too much when they're first exposed. The only cows we've ever had that seriously tried to kill me was a Brangus that had been brought in from the range and tranqed, one was a weanling Hereford heifer that thought I'ld loo kbetter squeezed through the corral, the other was a Red Angus Gelbvieh cross. She was the only nut case we got from those people. Her sire was too layed back, to get him to stand so I could get a look at him I finally had to have the owner twist his tail and I slapped him in the face with my cap. You run into loonys in every breed, but a lot of it has to do with how they;re handled originally. dun [/QUOTE]
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