Well, the day has come. It is sort of a sad day but today I put Tramp up for sale. He has been a very enjoyable bull to have around. He has a bit of personality, but is extremely docile. He has never been aggressive at all, even when in a tight corner with me only a couple of feet away. Thanksgiving day we got a bunch of snow and the extremely short grass they were on (our lawn looked like a hay field compairitively) was buried in snow. They maybe would have been able to scrounge for some feed but I was feeling like "Hey, it's thanksgiving and I am gonna eat pretty good, why shouldn't they." So I hauled the cattle here a couple of bales of bean straw. Well Tramp was the first one in the afore fenced off barn yard and checked out the bean straw, snuffed at it and proceeded to eat grass under the barnyard wire. Then this morning when the snow had melted back a bit, he left the bean straw to go back to nibbling on .5 inch tall grass. That bull has a serious love for grazing! Plus, he is one of the biggest chunks of meat I have seen. So, hopefully someone buys him, but none the less he is going to be missed. Even Angela likes him. He sings too her as he walks across the pasture when she dumps things like pear peals out for him.
26 November 2007
Tramp
Well, the day has come. It is sort of a sad day but today I put Tramp up for sale. He has been a very enjoyable bull to have around. He has a bit of personality, but is extremely docile. He has never been aggressive at all, even when in a tight corner with me only a couple of feet away. Thanksgiving day we got a bunch of snow and the extremely short grass they were on (our lawn looked like a hay field compairitively) was buried in snow. They maybe would have been able to scrounge for some feed but I was feeling like "Hey, it's thanksgiving and I am gonna eat pretty good, why shouldn't they." So I hauled the cattle here a couple of bales of bean straw. Well Tramp was the first one in the afore fenced off barn yard and checked out the bean straw, snuffed at it and proceeded to eat grass under the barnyard wire. Then this morning when the snow had melted back a bit, he left the bean straw to go back to nibbling on .5 inch tall grass. That bull has a serious love for grazing! Plus, he is one of the biggest chunks of meat I have seen. So, hopefully someone buys him, but none the less he is going to be missed. Even Angela likes him. He sings too her as he walks across the pasture when she dumps things like pear peals out for him.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
i do agree tramp is a very grand bull, too bad we will have to say arivour.
ReplyDeletewho but lu