JSchroeder
Well-known member
We sold a calf this spring to a guy and long story short, the calf is now afraid of him and his fight instinct has kicked in when he’s around. It’s spilled over into the way the calf is around his daughter as well.
He called me on Sunday and said they’re probably going to have to send him to the auction barn. Knowing the general situation I asked him to let me go check the calf out this week and see what advice I could give first. We went out there this afternoon (the calf's owner was not around) and I was able to walk up to him, grab the halter, and lead him around their outer pen twice. Thinking that it might have just been me that he was okay with, I turned the lead to my 68 year old father who hasn’t held a halter in 15 years, when we were kids. The calf walked just fine and setup for him with a show stick. There’s nothing wrong with the calf other than he’s gotten the impression his owners are predators in the biological predator/prey sense.
I’ve always been of the opinion that if you beat a calf and it starts trying to fight you, tough crap, you get what you deserve.
Is there any advice to give once a calf has decided that it can’t trust its owner?
He called me on Sunday and said they’re probably going to have to send him to the auction barn. Knowing the general situation I asked him to let me go check the calf out this week and see what advice I could give first. We went out there this afternoon (the calf's owner was not around) and I was able to walk up to him, grab the halter, and lead him around their outer pen twice. Thinking that it might have just been me that he was okay with, I turned the lead to my 68 year old father who hasn’t held a halter in 15 years, when we were kids. The calf walked just fine and setup for him with a show stick. There’s nothing wrong with the calf other than he’s gotten the impression his owners are predators in the biological predator/prey sense.
I’ve always been of the opinion that if you beat a calf and it starts trying to fight you, tough crap, you get what you deserve.
Is there any advice to give once a calf has decided that it can’t trust its owner?