John Gryphon
Well-Known Member
Much better is to fart like a tiger,they will know the sound instinctively.Make a noise like a warble fly, although we're not supposed to have any, cattle know about them.
Much better is to fart like a tiger,they will know the sound instinctively.Make a noise like a warble fly, although we're not supposed to have any, cattle know about them.
Its number 8 that seems to be the difficult part these days!Until recently I was the H&S officer for the local wildfowling club and had to write risk assesments including cattle in fields.
Cattle are big and protective of their young.
It's simular to riding a motorbike on the road, treat everything and every person as if it wants to kill you and you will survive.
1 Don't go into a field with cows and calves if you have a dog.
2 If you do keep an eye on the cattle and if they approach take the lead of the dog, it can run faster than you and the cows.
3 Stay close to the bounderies.
4 Do not run, a cow will always out run you.
5 Now we get to the brave bit, I worked with cows for 10 years, most are only inquisitive and will bound at you, don't run away, they will run you down, run at them they will scatter. I can guarantee it.
6 It doesn't work if they have small calves, they will just have a great time enjoying themselves jumping up and down on you.
7 Never take your eyes off the cattle.
8 Now the most difficult bit, use common sense.
Have a good day.
Alkathene is no longer permitted for cow whacking. All the drovers have had to go "old school" and revert to using a traditional hazel staff from the hedgerow. No bad thing, really.Sympathies with the family, ....................... along with a recommendation for four feet of alkathene, they respect it.
Hazel will not reproduce the sound as it isn't hollow, reckon they see blue too.Alkathene is no longer permitted for cow whacking. All the drovers have had to go "old school" and revert to using a traditional hazel staff from the hedgerow. No bad thing, really.
Poly pipe is used here as is the 7mm magusing a traditional hazel staff from the hedgerow.
Illegal to keep a bull on its own with a footpath there, must be accompanied by at least 2 cows! Go figure?Young cattle (heifers, steers, bullocks) are fine. They may "charge" at you en masse, but they'll always peel off at the last minute and pass either side. Then they'll crowd around, huffing and snorting in curiosity, but you just ignore them and keep walking. They'll either follow along behind you all the way to the boundary, or they'll get bored and wander off.
Cows with newborn / very young calves are a different matter and are best given a wide detour. Unless you get very close, a cow is unlikely to leave her calf unattended in order to chase you, but if you have a dog with you then that puts a completely different slant on things. If you do get attacked in this situation then either let the dog go, or pick it up if very small and unlikely to bark. (Cows don't seem to identify the dog as a threat once it's off the ground. They must think it's just disappeared. Only works with a very small dog, though. Trying to shoo away an irate cow while you've got a labrador tucked under your arm ain't gonna work!).
There are already laws about what cattle are allowed to graze in fields with footpaths running through them, and we don't need any more. It's not the cattle that are the problem, it's the kind of people that are using footpaths and the fact that they think they should be able to take Fido wherever they go.
Cattle have grazed footpaths and commons for centuries. Footpaths were originally created by local people going about their daily business. Mostly farmworkers going to and from work, or to church, or rural kids going to school. All people who understood cattle. The biggest problem with footpaths nowadays is that they have the word "public" in front of them.
If you don't like the cattle, go walk somewhere else.
Only beef breed bulls, it used to be.Illegal to keep a bull on its own with a footpath there, must be accompanied by at least 2 cows! Go figure?
Oops I thought I hadI think he means do you have a link to the news article…
The bullocks they put in the fields next to my paddocks are complete sh!theads and will go for anything!! Even the farmer won’t go in alone.I totally disagree with that.. steers/bullocks don`t give a continental really and will come over only due to the curious factor, its cows with young calves that get pi$$ed off with dogs, not people.
I go though a few hundred Angus here every day and they are very "dog aware" due to the predatory wild dogs although I do admit if I`m in the ute and the dog is running free they know its friendly fire so they don`t get huffy.
Cows with wee calves will respond to a dog with some fury depending on how close the dog trots past the calf. If a calf bawls EVERY cow comes running.
I have wild dogs eating a dead calf atm, they are pulling it around like a rag doll but are trap shy...I have another plan though.
With everything served up to them no wonder they are hostile. Its not the locals shooting stock, water tanks, power line insulators or whatever, leaving gates open (or shutting them) carving up areas doing 'circle work' blah blah.is how hostile country folk are towards city dwellers.
That`s easily answered by "and if you had a bunch of people doing what they like on your front lawn by a fire made from your wood"aggressive “keep off my land” type attitude
Should of kept his pants on.Cows with calves are dangerous a neighbour was killed last year while trying to get a calf to suckle.