Thanks, I saw this in other videos, few questions. Does this always work? Does this work on bulls as well? What is the effect of these loops that cow surrenders? Does this have an effect on hind legs starting to feel weaker? Would appreciate your views
Hi Zahid - we put your questions to our Vet School colleagues here at the Uni and they've replied: - Does this always work?No, it depends on the status of the cow, if she's calving or ill/weak she is much easier to cast compared to a strong healthy cow. However it should work on most cows and bulls, provided you get the technique right. - What is the effect?We're not really sure and the literature is not clear about this either; likely a combination of the rope squeezing action and the traction around the hind quarters that makes the cow lie/sit down - but then crucially it is the role of the person in charge of the halter to swing the head around that makes the cow recumbent (bit like turning a sheep). It may be pressure points/unusual proprioceptive information to the spinal cord which suppresses extensor reflexes. If anyone has a better explanation, please share! Hope that's useful.
@@uniofnottingham Thank you for your response, it did help, so the loops and halter work together. I noticed that in case of goats, if you grab the skin through fist, right on top of their back on hind legs, it does create some kind of pressure point and causes them to go low on their hind legs as well as they want to avoid this kind of grip. I thought cows would have some similar effect of giving up all together. See if you share my observation with goats.
Thanks for your comments! Yes, agree that you can create a similar response when applying pressure/pinching the cow's/goat's back; similar to the wither's pinch to detect traumatic reticulo-pericarditis. In our experience, turning the cow's head (towards the side that you do NOT wanther to lie down on) helps to make it easier to cast the cow, but is not essential as your suggested link shows. - Dr Wapenaar
Ban hunting, factory farming and slaughter houses. Respect the cow.Stop animal abuse and suffering. Adopting a vegetarian diet is better for forests, water conservation, less pollution, and can feed more hungry humans. Stop the torture and killing of all animals including people; it's related and we're related.
...I copied the same process in field and it worked finely...thanks alot lot sir..pls keep uploading such videos
Thanks, I saw this in other videos, few questions.
Does this always work?
Does this work on bulls as well?
What is the effect of these loops that cow surrenders? Does this have an effect on hind legs starting to feel weaker?
Would appreciate your views
Hi Zahid - we put your questions to our Vet School colleagues here at the Uni and they've replied:
- Does this always work?No, it depends on the status of the cow, if she's calving or ill/weak she is much easier to cast compared to a strong healthy cow. However it should work on most cows and bulls, provided you get the technique right.
- What is the effect?We're not really sure and the literature is not clear about this either; likely a combination of the rope squeezing action and the traction around the hind quarters that makes the cow lie/sit down - but then crucially it is the role of the person in charge of the halter to swing the head around that makes the cow recumbent (bit like turning a sheep). It may be pressure points/unusual proprioceptive information to the spinal cord which suppresses extensor reflexes. If anyone has a better explanation, please share!
Hope that's useful.
@@uniofnottingham Thank you for your response, it did help, so the loops and halter work together.
I noticed that in case of goats, if you grab the skin through fist, right on top of their back on hind legs, it does create some kind of pressure point and causes them to go low on their hind legs as well as they want to avoid this kind of grip. I thought cows would have some similar effect of giving up all together. See if you share my observation with goats.
Also have a look at this vid, halter seem to have no role but to hold.
Cheers
ruclips.net/video/H7zQQx4BZlQ/видео.html
Thanks for your comments! Yes, agree that you can create a similar response when applying
pressure/pinching the cow's/goat's back; similar to the wither's pinch to detect traumatic reticulo-pericarditis. In our experience, turning the cow's head (towards the side that you do NOT wanther to lie down on) helps to make it easier to cast the cow, but is not
essential as your suggested link shows. - Dr Wapenaar
@@uniofnottingham thanks for reverting.
Pl come to South India. All are ferocious breeds and very very intelligent you will love it
Terima kasih banyak atas ilmunya. Sangat bermanfaat sekali. Very good.
much helpful 👏👏
nity mean?
Yws
Which method is this
Nice demonstration
Who is Rueff ?
great idea
1:30
Rabbit comes out of the hole....runs around the tree ....goes back in the hole..... what's hard about that ?
বাংলাদেশ থেকে কারা কারা কোরবানির গরু শোয়ানোর টেকনিক শিক্ষতে আসছেন😂
Any diploma in agriculture students
Thanks sir
Thank you so much 😊
മലയാളികൾ ഉണ്ടൊ.....🙈🙋
Wow
Ban hunting, factory farming and slaughter houses. Respect the cow.Stop animal abuse and suffering. Adopting a vegetarian diet is better for forests, water conservation, less pollution, and can feed more hungry humans. Stop the torture and killing of all animals including people; it's related and we're related.
Good for u veg
You do realize that crop farming also causes forests to be cut down and water contamination due to fertilizer and pesticide run off, right?
@@melaniedrakonia4055 no where near what it takes to feed all the animals that end up getting slaughtered