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- #11
LMK17
Loving the herd life
Sounds fun if you can keep a good sense of humor about it! I think I'd be a little less jolly in the moment though! 
Good on you for handling it so well!
Good on you for handling it so well!
I honestly don’t understand why so many folks around here calve or kid in wintertime.![]()
A little change but the guy who had this place before me had a sow that hd didn't know was in heat. He went to work one day snd three months three weeks and three days later she blessed him with a litter of the cutest looking piglets you ever saw. What had happened was after he fed her and left, she climbed the pen, walked a mile down the road, climbed in with the boar, when service was complete, she walked home hot back in her pen and was laying in her pen when the fellow got home. Around 120 days later he saw the other farmer who asked him if he had piglets. Of course the answer was yes and at least half looked like dad.I had a cow that walked through a barbed wire fence one time, went 3 miles down the road to find a bull. True love.![]()
One thing that you will always have to deal with is bulls that don't want to stay home when you have cattle. We have it all the time. The hot wire on top is the best way to go and if it is a plug in fence charger rather than a solar/battery one then that is best....
I know there are some that would be horrified, but we raised all our various horses in all barbed wire fencing when I was a kid. 3 to 6 strands on most all the pastures/pens.
One of the reasons that there is alot of fall/winter calving, especially in your area is flies. Horn flies can eat up beef cattle and baby calves. There are also the tick problems. Plus, feeder cattle are worth more to sell in the spring.
One thing that you need to be aware of are your fencing laws there.
A little change but the guy who had this place before me had a sow that hd didn't know was in heat. He went to work one day snd three months three weeks and three days later she blessed him with a litter of the cutest looking piglets you ever saw. What had happened was after he fed her and left, she climbed the pen, walked a mile down the road, climbed in with the boar, when service was complete, she walked home hot back in her pen and was laying in her pen when the fellow got home. Around 120 days later he saw the other farmer who asked him if he had piglets. Of course the answer was yes and at least half looked like dad.