Livestock buial...

   / Livestock buial... #1  

Chuck K.

Gold Member
Joined
May 13, 2007
Messages
403
Location
Texas Gulf Coast
Tractor
2009 M59 w/thumb
Lately I have been getting quite a few calls to bury horses. I dont know if its from the heat or what is causing this. I usually I arrive with in 12hrs of the animal going down.

A lady called me yesterday asking if I could bury a horse the was old and died, I told her I would be there as soon as I got off work and loaded the tractor. I arrived right on time at 1830hrs.... Now what she did not tell me is the animal went down Sunday. I almost turned the job down luckly for me I was able to make a large hole upwind and carefully push the animal in and back fill it with out it popping.... Any advice on how to handle bloated animals about to pop?? I may simply start turning these down it was disgusting.. I cant figure out why someone would wait so long especially in this heat..
 
   / Livestock buial... #2  
Lately I have been getting quite a few calls to bury horses. I dont know if its from the heat or what is causing this. I usually I arrive with in 12hrs of the animal going down.

A lady called me yesterday asking if I could bury a horse the was old and died, I told her I would be there as soon as I got off work and loaded the tractor. I arrived right on time at 1830hrs.... Now what she did not tell me is the animal went down Sunday. I almost turned the job down luckly for me I was able to make a large hole upwind and carefully push the animal in and back fill it with out it popping.... Any advice on how to handle bloated animals about to pop?? I may simply start turning these down it was disgusting.. I cant figure out why someone would wait so long especially in this heat..

Inexperience?
 
   / Livestock buial... #3  
Why not back up 100 yards and shoot it. Then give it a little time to air out. The smell would likely get worse but atleast the risk of popping would be gone?

Sounds like a nasty job!
 
   / Livestock buial... #4  
Chuck, you're a good man for helping folks out like this, especially considering how unpleasant the job is. You deserve a big attaboy for doing it. We lost a large dog (100+ pounds) to a traffic accident a few years back while I was away on a business trip. In addition to how emotionally upsetting this family tragedy was for us, my wife had to deal with getting the old girl into the ground all by herself; through our neighbors she found a kind gentleman with a back hoe who came to her aid that same morning. To this day I don't know his name. It was such a relief that he was willing to come over and help out on such short notice. I guess he's cut from the same cloth that you are.

Anyway, we have two older horses of our own and the day will eventually arrive -- hopefully not for many years yet -- that we'll need the services of a back hoe again. Now that I've got my new tractor, I'm planning on getting my own BH for a variety of other projects, plus the inevitable equine burial duty sometime in the future.

It's never a good thing, but it's got to be done. From a fellow Texan, bless you for doing it.
 
   / Livestock buial... #5  
Really, three days doesn’t seem all that bad, though in this heat it’s not ideal. Some people simply don’t have time, or it’s not a priority. I know for a lot of horse folks it would be a priority, but for some of people horses are still just farm animals. Maybe they thought they had other means that then fell through? Hard to say. Regardless, I think your method was the way to go. Though it sometimes seems inevitable, having one “pop” is unlikely. If it ever happens, the smell is really the worst part. It’s not like you’ll have rotten guts landing on everything within 100’. :)
 
   / Livestock buial... #6  
So, out of ignorance on my part, what is the preferred, legal way to dispose of a dead animal?

I had a dog die a few years ago. My father-in-law buried her in his property, but it didn't seem like the way it is "supposed" to be done.

Never thought about it until then.
 
   / Livestock buial... #7  
............. I cant figure out why someone would wait so long especially in this heat..

One reason may be that they don't have to deal with it up close.

But reminds me of a video and pics of the whale that beached in Japan (I think). They managed to get it loaded on a semi flat trailer (hauling it to a site where some autopsy work could be performed), and when going through a downtown section, it blew. What a mess....tons of "stuff" on cars, people, walkways, streets and store fronts.

I'd think shooting into a bloated carcass to relieve the pressure would be the best (and mean a smaller hole to dig too).
 
   / Livestock buial... #8  
Originally Posted by Chuck K.
............. I cant figure out why someone would wait so long especially in this heat

That she "waited" is an assumption.

She may not have known who to call until she finally contacted you, or she may have called several others who couldn't do it then

In this heat an animal can bloat in under 24 hours

Unless it's a livestock operation that has a LOT of deaths, most people don't have a "burial service" on Speed Dial LOL
 
   / Livestock buial... #9  
When we have animals that die and bloat, they can be stuck with a knife and it is just like letting air out of a balloon. If you don't want to get that close, mount something srarp on the end of a long stick or rod. I buried a horse for my neighbor a few years ago and I did not realize how big a hole it took. It was a good 2 hr job with my backhoe. Ken Sweet
 
   / Livestock buial... #10  
Like another user said.. and I'm sure you don't hear it enough.

You are doing a good service for your customers. that's a hard nasty job. I have livestock and i can sure tell you when i find even something like a big old hog that has died.. it's a bad job.. smelly.. and yucky..

In many cases.. i bet your clients are desperate.. may have called other people and not gotten a response.. or a deal fell thru.. or they might have been away and returned to find the animal like that. who knows. I know I have piled a load of dirt on an animal that was bloated, then picked it up.. even thrown a canvas tarp over them to prevent messy pops.

good for you for helping people out. maybee always carry an old tarp or bedsheet with ya in case ya get a round one.. will prevent splatter... oh yeah.. carry somce vics vapor rub with ya.. rub under the nose! ;)

soundguy
 

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