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03/29/08, 11:07 PM
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Banned
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Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Michigan
Posts: 79
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What "name" do you use to call
in your cattle.
Big debate here at home.
My DH uses a word that may be spelled
KABASS
to me it sounds as though the bass part is like saying aghhhhh for the doctor. KABAAAAGHHHSSS
Anyhow, he claims that all the farmers use that word to call their cattle in at feeding time.
I say bull....t, it's the bang of the feed bucket that does it.
So the question is, what "name" do you use to call your cattle in?
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03/30/08, 01:11 AM
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 45
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rookies use herrrre cooow heerere coooow
vets use any of the following, bossy bossy boossssyyy, kabossyyy, and my dad would just whistle sometimes, oh and btw, you couldnt get out of earshot of that whistle either, we tried once to "claim" we didnt hear that whistle, that went over real well, lol
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RON PAUL 2012
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03/30/08, 06:05 AM
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: New Zealand
Posts: 2,558
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You can use any word you want to, it's what they get used to and associate with feeding, milking, changing of paddocks etc. I yell out "C'mon" and have cows, sheep, dogs, cats and chooks coming from all directions.
Having said that I can also yell out "Rosie", "Dancer" and 9 cows and a bull appear. I rattle the gate latch and the sheep come running up to be let through to a new paddock and when I say "OK, lets go" the dogs take that as a signal that we're finished at the cowshed and it's time to move the cows to their paddock. I have wild birds here that, when I yell out "C'mon Pukes", come running from everywhere for their handful of maize. All animals will respond to a repetitive command when it is tied in with an action.
Cheers,
Ronnie
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03/30/08, 06:17 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Central New York
Posts: 403
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I agree with you, Ronnie. Just yelling something signals their attention. Actually, I have even just come out into the barnyard, not make a sound and when they see me, come running. I usually clap my hands and say "c'mon, let's go."
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03/30/08, 06:37 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 703
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Come - boss, is what i say when I call the cows. But, when they are out thats a different story. I bet I can not post here what I call tehm then.
Bob
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03/30/08, 07:12 AM
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Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: sw virginia
Posts: 381
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Hewwww-Hewwwww
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03/30/08, 07:19 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: May 2005
Location: newcow, ark
Posts: 13
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The Milking Devon breed are known as Rubie's, so that's the call here; Haaayy Ruby!
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03/30/08, 07:20 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Vanleer, Tennessee
Posts: 151
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Our farm man calls "Seuuuuuuuuk, shuk, shuk, shuk!" which he said his mama used when they ran a dairy farm long ago. It works.
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03/30/08, 07:44 AM
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Kansas
Posts: 922
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So far... I shake a folgers plastic coffee thing half full of cubes and whistle at the gate
They come running to see me.
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Jennifer, Chase and the whole Darby clan
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03/30/08, 11:58 AM
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Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Missouri
Posts: 9,208
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My grandpa taught us years ago to call the cows with "Soooooocooowwww, Soooocow, Sooocow". Our cows have always been called that way. And it always makes me think of Papaw....
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Emily Dixon
Ozark Jewels
Nubians & Lamanchas
www.ozarkjewels.net
"Remember, no man is a failure, who has friends" -Clarence
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03/30/08, 01:13 PM
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Jhn Boy ina D Trump world
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: NC
Posts: 2,394
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I holler Blue and T-bone and they come a running!
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03/30/08, 01:19 PM
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Grandma's Dexter Farm
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Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Cedar Rapids(Toddville), Iowa
Posts: 181
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Actually my family always used to do kabaas also, but now with Dexters instead of Holsteins, you jiggle the chain on the gate and say come here ladies and you are liable to get licked from belly button to feet.
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03/30/08, 01:21 PM
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Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: WNC
Posts: 244
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We had cows when I was a kid.
My mom never called.....they saw her coming, and met her at the gate.
My dad whistled to call them (and everyone else)
That whistle could be heard anywhere on the property.
Like joseywales76's dads whistle.....there was no excuse to not hear that sound.
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03/31/08, 09:34 PM
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Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Cherokee Nation, Oklahoma
Posts: 1,488
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we always called "sook heifer, sook, sook". writing it down it looks silly, but thats how my granma called them in and thats how I do it. Of course, they will come to anything you say around feed time,
P.J.
__________________
 given the oppurtunity, a cow will always take the wrong gate...Baxter Black
www.newdaydexters.com
Irish Dexter Cattle for sale..............
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04/01/08, 04:10 AM
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: SE Ohio
Posts: 2,174
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Whoooooooooooooo...but with various intonations as you go along...and you gotta be facing the proper direction to get that down into the valley and around the various hills.
"Sacalf" was what we used to call the heifers up with.
Goats are called by yelling "Caaabraaaaas." Which sounds too much like "Thomas" being called by his older sister for my father's liking. I didn't realize that until I had trained them to that though...lol That all assumes they are out of sight. If they see me they usually come running.
When I make it up to the herd after they have pretended to not hear any of our hollering, I yell "Head'up" and various whistles.
We have 40+ fenceline neighbors and with the odd milking hours that are kept, the calls need to be fairly unobtrusive.
A neighbor likened the calling to a bird, I believe it was. She had not realized it was simply dad calling in the cows.
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04/01/08, 07:00 PM
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Utah
Posts: 406
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My mom grew up on a dairy farm, but it was gone before I came along. Grandpa called the cows with the "kaboss". In my 4-H days, the cows usually saw me and came before I got to the gate. Now at the dairy where I work, we have to chase the cows up to the barn for milking. I talk to the cows as I come into the corral. Some get up and mosey along, others I have to slap or throw dirt clods at. Boss says that on his very last day at the dairy, he is going to let the cows come in on their own sweet time. We expect that to take at least all day long with some of them.
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Eunice
Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass...
It's about learning to dance in the rain.
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04/01/08, 07:43 PM
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Humble Shepherd
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Northeast Ohio...60 minutes east of Cleveland
Posts: 323
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Mark me down as a "Kabass" Been doing it that way since I could toddle behind grampa to the barn.
I whistle for the horses like Josey Wale"s Father as stated above,, also worked very well for my boys when they were growing up.
The sheep , I clap my hands and say herrrreee babies.
Pigs I yell Come pig, pig pig. never have been the "souie" type!
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04/01/08, 08:03 PM
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Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 332
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I was another one who called them booossyyy or mooooocooowww. Either one worked well since they knew we had food.
Sarah
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04/01/08, 09:14 PM
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Cedar Cove Farm
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: MO
Posts: 1,706
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ronney
You can use any word you want to, it's what they get used to and associate with feeding, milking, changing of paddocks etc. I yell out "C'mon" and have cows, sheep, dogs, cats and chooks coming from all directions.
Having said that I can also yell out "Rosie", "Dancer" and 9 cows and a bull appear. I rattle the gate latch and the sheep come running up to be let through to a new paddock and when I say "OK, lets go" the dogs take that as a signal that we're finished at the cowshed and it's time to move the cows to their paddock. I have wild birds here that, when I yell out "C'mon Pukes", come running from everywhere for their handful of maize. All animals will respond to a repetitive command when it is tied in with an action.
Cheers,
Ronnie
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I think that is the key, repetitiveness. I call my girls by their name the exact same singing way and they both respond accordingly.
__________________
"Whatever makes men good Christians, makes them good citizens. Let us not forget the religious character of our origin."- Daniel Webster(1782-1852)
Cedar Cove Farm
Cedar Cove Farm On Etsy
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04/01/08, 09:16 PM
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Cedar Cove Farm
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: MO
Posts: 1,706
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Just curious, is "kaboss" an abbreviated form of "come bossy"?
__________________
"Whatever makes men good Christians, makes them good citizens. Let us not forget the religious character of our origin."- Daniel Webster(1782-1852)
Cedar Cove Farm
Cedar Cove Farm On Etsy
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