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Halter Breaking
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<blockquote data-quote="TexasJerseyMilker" data-source="post: 1851455" data-attributes="member: 42782"><p>Two different times I tried to halterbreak half Jersey half Angus heifers to be family milk cows) I tried pressure and release, food rewards, leaving them in pens to step on their own lead ropes, even tried leading them tied to a 4 wheeler. It took all summer and many rope burns because they would suddenly take off for no reason. Unlike their mother I raised (pure Jersey) who followed me around right off the truck. Both times with these heifers, when I went somewhere for a few months, came back it was like no one had ever laid a hand on them. I believe they inherited the Scottish F U disposition.</p><p>These heifers were cow raised not bottle raised. Maybe that had something to do with it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TexasJerseyMilker, post: 1851455, member: 42782"] Two different times I tried to halterbreak half Jersey half Angus heifers to be family milk cows) I tried pressure and release, food rewards, leaving them in pens to step on their own lead ropes, even tried leading them tied to a 4 wheeler. It took all summer and many rope burns because they would suddenly take off for no reason. Unlike their mother I raised (pure Jersey) who followed me around right off the truck. Both times with these heifers, when I went somewhere for a few months, came back it was like no one had ever laid a hand on them. I believe they inherited the Scottish F U disposition. These heifers were cow raised not bottle raised. Maybe that had something to do with it. [/QUOTE]
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