and learned that “It’s not usually possible to tell if you’re looking at a bull or cow just by looking at their face. You’d need to get a look at their bellies to tell them apart for sure. Udders are only visibly present in cows.”
and learned that “It’s not usually possible to tell if you’re looking at a bull or cow just by looking at their face. You’d need to get a look at their bellies to tell them apart for sure. Udders are only visibly present in cows.”
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EXPRESSIONS
Loves, lamentation, and life through prose, stories, passions, and essays.
Let's Explore The Great Mystery Together!
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choosing medical career; problem faced by doctors; drawbacks of medical profession;patient tutorials
Cries from Jamaica
A place where I post unscripted, unedited, soulless rants of a insomniac madman
CHOOSE LOVE
My Life And Everything Within It
Just Here Secretly Figuring Out My Gender
A Watering Hole for Freelance Human Beings Who Still Give a Damn
"The only thing that stands between you and your dream is the will to try and the belief that it is actually possible." - Joel Brown
we're all cyborgs now
Seeking Dialogue to Inform, Enlighten, and/or Amuse You and Me
Bulls have their own adornment down under. Steers not so much… What got you to thinking along these lines?
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I read a note in genealogy that someone’s cow had fallen down a well. Only one horn was broken. So I wondered about horns, and received this helpful little note from Google…Glad you asked.
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Ah, found it! 1895 S.L. Goff’s cow falls into a well. She broke one horn but was rescued with a block and tacvkle. In Bedford County, Va. (Second reply to Sautee Barb.
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