Cattle law basics- is your state a "fence law" or "range law" state? Fence law means owner of livestock required to keep them in his fences or joint boundary fence- loose cattle on road and car collision the catle owner responsible, same with crop damage, etc. Range law state means no fence needed- gardeners and crop farmers maintain their fences to keep cattle out, no fence, cattle graze your flower bed- your problem. Hit cow on road - you pay for cow. you corral cow in range state and owner may charge you with theft. Check sherrif and see what he says. Could be local, could be some PETA rescue/stolen from long ways away, could be trailer accident and they got loose long way from home. In rough times a herd that is insured and dissapears/wanders off may be a break even payout instead of loss at auction. Others may let their pets go wander instead of send to butcher if they are being foreclosed. Loose horses and hogs known to happen that way- can"t feed them, don"t want to slaughter so treat like unwanted dog and turn loose close to somebodies feed ground or pasture. RN
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Today's Featured Article - 12-Volt Conversions for 4-Cylinder Ford 2000 & 4000 Tractors - by Tommy Duvall. After two summers of having to park my old 1964 model 4000 gas 4 cyl. on a hill just in case the 6 volt system, for whatever reason, would not crank her, I decided to try the 12 volt conversion. After some research of convert or not, I decided to go ahead, the main reason being that this tractor was a working tractor, not a show tractor (yet). I did keep everything I replaced for the day I do want to restore her to showroom condition.
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