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You never turn your back to a ram. Some farmers put bells on them so you know where they are at all times. Once they hit you, they'll often back up and run towards you again. No joke.
Sheep are very very dangerous - suddenly they'll charge you from the back because you walked funny - then they'll ram you again when your down. Even the Ewes can, rare, be fickle.
You always hear LE talk about the sheep, wolves and sheep dog, they forget about the ram in the flock that will deal with the wolf and aggressive sheep dogs.
@@definitelynotanAIchatbot I tried to find the original, but theres only shortened clips, people have claimed to see the original and the cow gets back up after some time, but im not sure about that
You know what? I think he’s an animal trainer. And/ or a naturally rough and tumble guy playing with a rowdy pet. He makes old age look a lot more fun!
The reason I’m vegan is because I don’t hold myself to the morals of animals. I as a higher thinking creature realize that even if I did need meat my body can still go years without it as there’s plenty of thriving veteran vegans. Therefore, to kill and eat animals at the frequency most people do is immoral as animals are essentially asked to die unnecessary deaths. Animals don’t know better- humans do and humans are the ones destroying the planet. … no I don’t care if you eat meat, but please have better defenses than “The animals!” Animals also kill their babies, eat their spouses and abandon the sick but humans have no issue seeing those behaviors as immoral.
@@B1Springfield If people knew how animals die in the wild, they would be glad the animals died at our hands instead. There are no humane endings in the forest. Animals seldom die of old age either.
@@RU-vid-Community-Manager And you haven't understood my comment at all. Unfortunately that happens all too often these days as people only seem to be interested in what they themselves have to say.
I heard the cow grunt and moo after it went down. It was probably knocked out, not killed. Worst case scenario is paralysis however. Them legs gave out instantly. I hope it didn't break it's neck.
@@jxmai7687 He seems to be proving a point. I understand the language spoken by the bystanders. They are repeatedly telling him: "It's enough! Please stop now."
When my dad was a kid, they had a prized stud bull in a stall in the barn next to a stall that held several sheep. One night during a severe thunderstorm, lightning scared one of the sheep enough that it jumped over the separating wall, ending up in the bulls stall. The next morning, Dad found the sheep with the corpse of the bull, sometime in the night, the sheep had butted heads with the bull and killed it. Sheep have amazingly thick skulls, you don't win a head butting contest with them!
Idk why, but I always find it funny after rams smash into each other, they just stand there… it’s almost like you can see the cartoon birds and stars circling their heads 😵💫
I had a barbado ewe and a potbellied sow scrap it out one day over a small bare patch to lie down on. They had an acre and a half under the pines and elsewhere under other trees to pick out a spot, so it was a power thing. I would yell out a window for them to cut it out, several times that day, and they would stop for a moment and go back to it as soon as they thought I wasn't watching. Neither one was going to cede their ground, so they wound up laying side by side on that patch when they finally got tired. I had another ewe who had her own spot and she just watched the show. It was cute in such a way. My sheep wasn't attacking my pig that bad or vice versa, or I would have separated them. My ewe would head butt a little and my sow would head swipe a little, the sheep used her front legs a little, both stomped around, and they did it all day over that spot --- but they were just trying to see who would lead their combined 'herd' after I rehomed the ram and the boar and put the old females to run together to enjoy all the space and the large pond at any time. Nobody was injured or eliminated. That wasn't their point. Pecking order was. If any of my livestock was out to harm another I would not combine them. It is more than sad that the cow was killed. It was sad to watch that one sheep with that potbellied pig in this video. People have to keep a good eye when they put their animals in together, and not just through a camera lens. Know what they are capable of and be cognizant of what their likely motivations are. These are herding animals, and so it it unlikely that one, two, or three would want to actually kill one another. A larger herd is better than being alone or cut down to two. But some animals get other ideas, for whatever reason, like the sheep and pig here. But truth be told, nobody was probably expecting the sheep and cow outcome, not the owners, not the cow, and probably not the sheep, either --- even if the sheep wanted to eliminate the threat of a mother cow.
5:02 the bull still standing was face-plowed into the floor; while upward force was delivered to the bull-on-the-right: I doubt anyone recognized the bull left-standing, was still, equally KO'd on its feet.
did that sheep really kill that cow? maybe knocked out but I doubt it actually died. we don't have sheep but we have goats who are similar in size to that sheep. anyway I often roughhoused with our animals back in the province and have taken headbutts from those goats which doesn't hurt nearly as much as it looks. much like this guy at 7:27.
@@thesolaraquariumno the cow does let out a bellow just before ceases to move. Usually not a good sign. Cattle skulls are not meant for this type of fight.
@@yesno9592Not sure what you're on about to be honest. All I know from living in a farming community is that paddocks are fenced off and have gates for this very reason. To separate animals from each other. We had alpacas and had to separate the males at breeding time otherwise they were always fighting, fighting = injuries or death. Same goes for mixed livestock.
I was at a friend's house as a kid and they had a goat in the back yard, so we were played in the front yard kicking a ball around and someone kicked it over the house. I was like I got it and ran through the house to the backyard and as I went to pick up the ball that dam goat I forgot about nailed me and I went flying!
А если барану удастся нормально разогнаться и удариться об него несколько раз то кабанчик твой не будет рад продолжать бой, а барану пофигу, у него башка железная, точнее рога
It is very unlikely the cow died from the impact. They have also a thick skull because the bulls keep on fighting in a similar fashion as rams. It probably only got knocked out.
quando vejo estes animais metido a brabos e violento com outros animais que não tem defesa me da uma vontade de sanar esta agressividade de dar cabeçadas revidando com uma marreta de 5kg bem no coco, nunca mais eles vão agredir outros animais com cabeçadas. e comemoramos com um churrasco... carne não dar em arvores....
I doubt the cow was killed, they’re pretty tough. More likely just knocked unconscious and probably came too a few minutes later. Of course the voice over has to exaggerate, either that or they don’t know and just assumed judging by the footage, but sleep easy knowing it is extremely unlikely the cow was killed. 😊