
From a query over on the SASS Wire. My New Old Shotgun.
Terry Murbach wrote:A STOCK DETECTIVE ?
Ya, I can hear that line now... Son, I don't care what your Daddy said... y'all gonna play for UT... or else!"20cows wrote:A UT recruiter?
...a serious one.
Same reason an ex girlfriend's father offered to shoot me if he found me where I wasn't supposed to be.mergus wrote:Sore Shoulder -- help an uninformed easterner understand the requirement to shoot a bull where its not supposed to be?
Mergus
And yet, I've had other ranchers pay me to lease 'em my longhorn bull for a few weeks for servicing their heifers. Longhorns typically throw small calves, and for a first calf, it can be pretty easy on some of the smaller, 1st year cows... As some of the purebred cows can be pretty small when they first come of breeding age.sore shoulder wrote:Never heard of that but in CO there is a law on the books making it a REQUIREMENT to shoot any longhorn bull found on open range. Years ago when a local grass thief was dumping longhorn cows inside our fenced subdivision I threatened to use it with the caveat that I couldn't tell the difference between a longhorn cow and bull.
A shotgun stock that was produced prior to 1930. Now... when the plate was afixed? No idea, neither does the current owner.Rusty wrote:That piece of brass looks like it's on a rifle stock, is it?
Colorado ranchers, and probably Montana and Wyoming also, spent a lot of money importing shorthorn/polled Durham, Hereford and Angus cattle that have a better quality of beef, carry more weight(this is $ for ranchers who get paid by the pound), and don't have long horns to tear up horses and cowboys and whatever else they decided to tear up, and they seem to want to hook their horns in everything you don't want them to (I've had a few things torn up especially in winter). Having a stringy longhorn range bull ruin your carefully bred beef herd would be costly, even today just the rumor of it can cost you at the sale barn. I've gotten a couple halfbreed yearlings for a steep discount on the agreement that I never talk about it's heritage. Most of my local neighbor ranchers seem to favor an Angus cow bred by a Hereford bull which tends to throw a black baldy. There are some running Scottish highland cows.mergus wrote:Sore Shoulder -- help an uninformed easterner understand the requirement to shoot a bull where its not supposed to be?
Mergus