Well done. This person appears to have a great understanding of animal behavior and the animals she is dealing with. It would be very dangerous to believe a stranger could do this. One doesn't do this without having lots of experience with these two bulls. Impressive however there is still substantial risk involved.
Well done, can't say I know of any lady's that would have walked out there. Very tricky if they were to kick off again. I would get ready to run for sure😆 Take care Penny
I really don't think they was fighting maybe she stop them before they really start because when two bull's really fighting u not going to stop them or get that close to them that to much power but she's got big nerve just saying man
They are very dangerous, but they can also be very gentle, especially towards humans they know well. They absolutely know their strengths too and they will be gentle around humans as long as those humans are kind to them. But farmers have been killed by Bulls they raised, rare as it is they can kill their owners. But a lot of that can be carelessness by farmers. Bulls have to be treated with great awareness when Cows go into season. Like all males our balls can take over our brains and some Bulls can see a male farmer as competition. .
@@STHFGDBY I wonder if there are sub cortex reflexes, like the knee jerk reflex or the pain/bite reflex in dogs that cattle have. I've never heard of studies of this. My great grandfather was gored, killed, by a bull he raised from a calf. The bull had a loop of rope hung on his horn and when the man tried to lift the rope the bull gored him. Then it went crazy, bellowing and running around like it was grieving for what it had done. It had to be shot. Nobody could adequately explain why it gored him or why it seemed to lose its mind afterwards. Strange family story and back then at the turn of the 20th Century there were no college studies on the behavior or neurological reflexes in cattle. The best the family could explain the tragedy was somehow handling the rope around the bull's horn startled it causing it to react without thinking. It was such a sad story.
Sam Schneider, you are correct they aren't even close to fighting, but something we tried and worked great. Spray them with apple cider vinegar using a kids water gun, takes about 30 seconds, the fight stops and they walk away from each other. I thought it was BS but my wife showed me up by doing just that.
Wow is all I can say, that is one brave and calm lady. What is the psychology that is going on here, this is a serious question, I do not need a bunch of silly answers.
She has a lot of positive energy, and is handling them with a calm and confident voice. The bulls, contrary to what people think are smart, and they read a person like a dog does. They know if you are unsure of yourself and take advantage, if they sense you are confident, they will not challenge you. Hope the answer helped.
Well I'm sorry to say not being mean but that's no bull fight I've seen bull fight we've had bulls that fought for two days straight and you're not breaking them up you can try with pickups and tractors you don't break them up you can't ride a horse in between them and break it up if there aiming to fight and you damn sure don't walk out in the middle of them they're just out there sizing each other up right now
Sam Schneider that's true. My neighbor tried separating two bulls with a 265 Massey Ferguson tractor. His big Angus put his neck under the front end and lifted it off the ground. My other neighbors 2,000 lb Charolais had gotten in the pasture.
That’s like the saying playing with fire 🔥 lol. Getting them to tame is also an issue they then don’t fear you and become a pest like playing with a 1 ton dog 🐕
thought a yearling Holstein Steer was going to kill me and my buddy one yr.....it was late April, maybe May, he raised Herefords with the occasional Holstein steer from local dairy farmers for beef, contract raise for friends. We were in middle of about 4-5 acre breeding, calf pasture, about 100-150 feet from nearest fence line, the Holstein had it's horns, but one horn, hooked in front of it's eye, the other normal, so we named him "Hook"....we had ear tagged all the new Hereford calves but one, the runt of the the year....when finally grab it....it lets out a cry......Hook considered himself the protector of the herd and we actually saw the very athletic steer hurdle a pasture fence, no joke, it had been watching the White Tails....Hook comes charging full speed, my buddy and I start screaming, I jump up waving my arms, my buddy hangs onto calf...Hook stops, head down, snorting and yes they paw(hoof) the ground...about 10 yards away....I very slowly back to the fence and go get the axe handle from garage.....come back and push Hook away while my buddy finishes....we went in house after that had a beer, a shot and smoked a joint(35 yrs ago) to calm down, we both thought at minimum, we were going to the hospital.
Mamma I am 75 years old and there is no way you can stop a bull fight with a stick. Those bulls are not even breathing hard, not much of a fight. Don't ever try to stop bulls that are really fighting. Your to pretty of a young woman to die. They are nice looking bulls too but note cute as you. I think maybe she was doing a little PR work for Brookhill Angus. Anyway nice show.
Our bulls were always afraid of disappointing us. If they got into a fight and we had to come outside, the minute they heard us tell them they were being ugly and disappointing us, they would separate. Am little more fussing and they would hang their heads in shame. True fact. I could tell them to come to me and decide if they wanted a spanking or not and they would come over. I could tell them to sit down and behave if they didn't want a spanking and they would drop to the ground. After a few more minutes of talking out their issues and behaviors, we would go to the barn for a snack. Never spanked them a single time. They just knew. Absolute fact. Had a stallion that kept popping in his building at my mother's house and I went out there and fussed at him while I was cleaning up his mess. He watched the entire tire. I walked him outside and told him to NEVER poop in his house again and went home. Five years later and he still hasn't pooped in there. Animals are smart if you listen.
They weren't that docile, did you notice how alert and 'calm' she was? She knew what she was dealing with. She was very much aware of both those animals.
Brookhill Angus I started it a couple years ago delivered an angus bull to a friend of mine that does AI as well and I am not sure what got into him but he was like just drop him with the heifers and let’s see what he can do first one he mounted he broke that went 3,000 grand in 60 seconds I have AI ever since
IF this sweet young lady had twice been almost killed by Guernsey bulls (as I have) she'd not trust even 'fairly docile' Abangs. A bull is a very complex & swift rage machine......never NEVER trust them as many have found out to their great cost. (You MAY get away with it but then there's that odd time...............)
Yea right.. we had 2 2500 lb bulls go at it for 3 days strait. We tried stopping them with skid steers and tractors finally we picked the better of the two and shot the other. They weren't going to stop til both of them were dead. This video wasn't even a lil tiss
That's his territory and those are his cows ...that other guy can't be sniffing around them in his territory...mess with my girls and you get the horn.
Why did you put two bulls in the same pasture? That ain’t (isn’t) rite (right) brite (bright)! Same as two stallions - nuts! Unless of course you want to watch them fight.
They grew up together, and they weren't really fighting. All they did was lay around and chill. The one on the left is now working in Tennessee. We never put two unfamiliar bulls together.
She must have raised them. I don't think that's a good idea. Although I used to ride our bull that looked similar to them, which we raised. But I wouldn't have interfered if he was pissed at another bull. It's a good video though, she's brave.