Diseases of cattle, sheep, goats Diseases of cattle, sheep, goats and swine diseasesofcattle00mous Year: 1920 724 Ol'EKATIONS. Another, though less practical, method consists in using two long ropes, each fixed to the base of the horns and passed first between the front, then the hind limbs, round the hind pasterns from within outwards and then brought for- B ward (Fig. 292). When the ropes are drawn tight bj'- assistants standing in front of the animal, the latter usually falls on its hocks and rolls over to the right or left, according to the direction given to it. A third method is partic


Diseases of cattle, sheep, goats Diseases of cattle, sheep, goats and swine diseasesofcattle00mous Year: 1920 724 Ol'EKATIONS. Another, though less practical, method consists in using two long ropes, each fixed to the base of the horns and passed first between the front, then the hind limbs, round the hind pasterns from within outwards and then brought for- B ward (Fig. 292). When the ropes are drawn tight bj'- assistants standing in front of the animal, the latter usually falls on its hocks and rolls over to the right or left, according to the direction given to it. A third method is particularly useful in young or feeble animals. It consists in fixing around the horns a rope about eight, to ten yards in length, the free end of which is carried along the upper margin of the neck and back. A loop is formed embracing the base of the neck, a second behind the shoulders in the region occupied by the girth, and a third around the flanks (Fig. 293). By pulling in a backward direction the rope is drawn tight, and the animal first backs and afterwards falls on its hocks, subsiding either to the right or left, as in the case previously mentioned.


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