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Trimming Horns
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<blockquote data-quote="hillsdown" data-source="post: 672837" data-attributes="member: 5106"><p>That's all we use Cfpinz as well works great and if you cut high enough you won't have blood but they do grow back.</p><p></p><p>We did about 40 head one day of Holstein heifers that we had whose previous owner neglected to dehorn at birth. We had two exchange students from Holland who helped and they looked like they had butchered something they were covered head to toe with blood. We tied the horns together tight first with baling twine and then cut the horns off right at the head. Usually they only gave a slight spray but the odd one was a run away that we had to cauterize with the dehorner.</p><p></p><p>However I will go will a polled animal any day.. ;-)</p><p></p><p>BTW if you want to dehorn an animal in Holland the vet has to do it and the animal is sedated and blocked.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="hillsdown, post: 672837, member: 5106"] That's all we use Cfpinz as well works great and if you cut high enough you won't have blood but they do grow back. We did about 40 head one day of Holstein heifers that we had whose previous owner neglected to dehorn at birth. We had two exchange students from Holland who helped and they looked like they had butchered something they were covered head to toe with blood. We tied the horns together tight first with baling twine and then cut the horns off right at the head. Usually they only gave a slight spray but the odd one was a run away that we had to cauterize with the dehorner. However I will go will a polled animal any day.. ;-) BTW if you want to dehorn an animal in Holland the vet has to do it and the animal is sedated and blocked. [/QUOTE]
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