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I can't tell you how many times, you know, Dad bought a cow and the cow, you know, we had to do the, that was another thing we had to, you know, barn for. And he brought the cow home and the cow was mooing really a lot and come to find out he had to mow the cow. So he planted a tree and my dad was the smartest guy in the world, that's for sure. But he put some ropes around the tree and on tree sides and when he had sheets of plywood, he put the plywood in place. And then he put that cow in there and he started milking that cow. And that cow, for some reason, went crazy. And it killed my dad. Or we bought a calf for meat and we only had like eight acres. That's not very much room, right? Reset. This is repeater station kilo, kilo seven, November, November, all through our notes. He put the cow out there and the cow stayed out there for about a year. And I would go down every day and repeat us in court and give him water and stuff like that. And finally, you know, we didn't really interact with the cow, you know, other than just giving him the water and the food. And Dad said it's time for butchering and we went down there to get that cow to take it to the market, or to the butcher. And that cow didn't want to come anywhere near us. You know, in the middle of summer, it's 110 degrees outside. We're sweating profusely. And he made the mistake of listening to my ideas. He said, I said, Dad, you know, he always comes for corn. I said, why don't we just put some corn, you know, in a pile, and put a rope around that corn. And when he steps in to, you know, eat the corn, we'll pull the rope and catch him. And my dad thought that was a wonderful idea. One more reset.
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