Posted: 6/12/2021 10:22:33 AM EDT
[#12]
Quote History Quoted:
I've watched that before when you posted it. Farmers, ranchers know more about animals than soldiers, city folks, pretty much anyone. They live closer to the animals birth, life, death, than anyone else. They are the experts. They know what a dead cow looks like, and normal predation. When a cow dies and nothing will eat it, not even buzzards, and it just lies there for months until it is desicated, blown away by the wind....something is very, very wrong. Nature despises a vacuum, and waste. Buzzards, flies, maggots, bacteria, they specialize in cleaning up death. When they won't touch something, there is a mystery that needs to be examined closely. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quote History Quoted:Quoted:Yep. The lack of blood is a weird one. Strangest I've heard personally was from a cattle rancher (Dave Womack) I interviewed over in Christmas Valley, Oregon for an agriculture magazine I work on. This had all of the standard cattle mutilation things: sex organs removed, no blood, etc. BUT, the weird part was that this (bull) was found dead right beneath a huge juniper tree only a couple hours after one of the ranchers had seen it alive and well. In this case, all of the branches of the juniper tree above the bull had been "cored out", like some sort of death ray came down and zapped them. Here's the interview. I ask him about the cattle mutilation at the 8:38 mark. We were in a diner, so there's a lot of background noise. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tc02ysBzmk0 I've watched that before when you posted it. Farmers, ranchers know more about animals than soldiers, city folks, pretty much anyone. They live closer to the animals birth, life, death, than anyone else. They are the experts. They know what a dead cow looks like, and normal predation. When a cow dies and nothing will eat it, not even buzzards, and it just lies there for months until it is desicated, blown away by the wind....something is very, very wrong. Nature despises a vacuum, and waste. Buzzards, flies, maggots, bacteria, they specialize in cleaning up death. When they won't touch something, there is a mystery that needs to be examined closely. While I generally agree with you. I have stumbled on elk who obviously died of natural causes that nothing fed on. One cow elk had its rear leg caught in the fork of a tree and obviously starved to death yet not a thing had taken a bite. I have also had a calf die of some kind of infection or something in a stall in my barn and then taken the calf out to the pasture where the coyotes would normally eat him and had not a single bite taken out of him.
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