In order to participate in the GunBroker Member forums, you must be logged in with your GunBroker.com account. Click the sign-in button at the top right of the forums page to get connected.
How many of you country boys know what it means when saying it is never to hot to cut a horse and
dreher
Member Posts: 8,882 ✭✭✭✭
never to cold to cut a pig???
In both cases truer words were never spoken!!
Comments
I will admit that I don't know. BUT, being second in line I just have to say yuuup, and take a drink of my beer.
I get the pig part but not the horse (unless it cutting it from the herd).
Castration ,,,,
Ya'll know what the cut pig said?
ruint, ruint, ruint, ruint. add pig accent
I never knew temperature played a part in it.
And fiery auto crashes
Some will die in hot pursuit
While sifting through my ashes
Some will fall in love with life
And drink it from a fountain
That is pouring like an avalanche
Coming down the mountain
I helped my father in law with the pigs once. ONCE!!! Forgetaboutit.
You mean getting married ...................... ?
Bet the pig didn't either ............................
Yes, it means castration but why is it never to hot to castrate a horse and never to cold to castrate a pig??
Kinda, sorta ,,,,,,😂
Kinda, sorta ,,,,🤣
Makin' barrows out of boars.......yep.......I was the "catcher"......at about 12 years old.
Muddy and messy.........they had to hose me down.....before grandma would even let me in the shower!🤣
Good times....
Grewup farming and always had hogs. Helped castrate hundreds. Never heard the phrase. Must be a regional thing .
I like bacon
OooooWeeee, did that to a full grown boar! Worse than a bucking mustang!
Good friend would help "cut" the piglets.
Said there was no way to get the pig poo off your hands, no soap, no perfume.
Just wear it off. Younger member of the family was chosen for the honor.
Been years since I cut a hog, but we always cut our colts by the sign, farmers almanac .
But to answer the question, no, never heard that one.
Mule
Had an old farmer friend now very long gone who would come out to my uncles farm to cut his billy goats. He only did the job during certain phases of the moon cycle
. I can't remember exactly what phase he used.
I would speculate when that phrase came about liquor was involved.
Most likely! Probably a New Moon cycle. Where the night is totally DARK so ole Granny can't see what mischief the ole boy is up to! 😂
If I remember correctly, if you are castrating by the signs you want the sign to be below the knees. Below the knees reduces swelling.
Come on now, none of you have answered the original questions. Once I answer these two questions it will be exceedingly obvious why it is never to hot to cut a horse or to cold to cut a pig.
You want it cold when cutting pigs to hold down the smell of the pigpen; you want it hot when your're cutting horses so they won't be so frisky as when it's cool.
I have no clue, but somehow fairly sure I’m not missing anything.