Spiveyman
Platinum Member
I definitely don't have enough bunk space for all to eat in peace. That is one place where the horns are an issue. Right now I have three feeders that are about 10' long. The (smarter) cows are always the first ones to the feeders. They will flat out run when they hear me holler. My longhorn cows actually do a pretty good job of feeding next to each other. They will all tilt their heads and pack in pretty well. Then my tenant farmer's charolais mix cows show up and mess up the game. They get aggressive pushing my cows around, which mine don't like so they start fighting back, but the charolais (almost twice the size of mine) have very small, but very functional horns. Mine usually loose that fight.
About then Shooter walks up and the crowd splits like Moses and the Red Sea. He'll walk up to the middle of one trough and just stand there. His horns just about cover it end to end. So he winds up feeding out of one of the troughs and the rest fight over the others. Shooter will feed next to the other longhorn cows, but not the charolais. It's weird. The two herds don't mix much. The longhorns are usually spread all the way across the field, but kind of move together around the field grazing. The other cattle bunch up and just kind of stand there. They will graze a spot right down to the dirt, then the slightest rain and you have a mud pit. It's interesting to see the personalities of the breeds playing out in a herd.
I may have to pick up some more feeders, the other thing I want to do is get the pens set up so that I can run them through the barn. There are wooden bunk feeders built into the barn, the entire length of the barn, a two sided deal with a V shaped thing above it to put hay in. Thats about 80 feet of feed space, plus it gets them happy about being in the barn.
I'd love one of those signs. The deal with the break in, my granny (81 yrs old) is living in the house on the farm right now. I live about 40 min away in Lexington. A couple months ago my mom came over and took her in to town to get groceries and such. Someone completely busted in the back door. She had French doors, both were destroyed along with the frame around the door. They ransacked the house only to figure out that granny didn't have much worth stealing. They maybe got $200 - $300 worth of stuff as everything valuable was locked in a safe. They drug the safe about 2 feet and gave up on it. However, it cost me about $800 to replace the back door and build a new frame around the doorway, trim it out and paint it. Plus the 3 - 4 weeks of time I couldn't get anything done on the farm because I was working on that door every time I was out there. I'd love to tie the punk(s) that did that to one of those feed bunks and dump 100 lb's of grain in there.
It's over now, but granny hasn't left the house since then, she's afraid to, and that's not healthy for her.
About then Shooter walks up and the crowd splits like Moses and the Red Sea. He'll walk up to the middle of one trough and just stand there. His horns just about cover it end to end. So he winds up feeding out of one of the troughs and the rest fight over the others. Shooter will feed next to the other longhorn cows, but not the charolais. It's weird. The two herds don't mix much. The longhorns are usually spread all the way across the field, but kind of move together around the field grazing. The other cattle bunch up and just kind of stand there. They will graze a spot right down to the dirt, then the slightest rain and you have a mud pit. It's interesting to see the personalities of the breeds playing out in a herd.
I may have to pick up some more feeders, the other thing I want to do is get the pens set up so that I can run them through the barn. There are wooden bunk feeders built into the barn, the entire length of the barn, a two sided deal with a V shaped thing above it to put hay in. Thats about 80 feet of feed space, plus it gets them happy about being in the barn.
I'd love one of those signs. The deal with the break in, my granny (81 yrs old) is living in the house on the farm right now. I live about 40 min away in Lexington. A couple months ago my mom came over and took her in to town to get groceries and such. Someone completely busted in the back door. She had French doors, both were destroyed along with the frame around the door. They ransacked the house only to figure out that granny didn't have much worth stealing. They maybe got $200 - $300 worth of stuff as everything valuable was locked in a safe. They drug the safe about 2 feet and gave up on it. However, it cost me about $800 to replace the back door and build a new frame around the doorway, trim it out and paint it. Plus the 3 - 4 weeks of time I couldn't get anything done on the farm because I was working on that door every time I was out there. I'd love to tie the punk(s) that did that to one of those feed bunks and dump 100 lb's of grain in there.