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Nose ring (animals) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nose ring (animals)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A show halter and a copper nose ring on a Murray Grey bull
A show halter and a copper nose ring on a Murray Grey bull

A nose ring is the aluminum, stainless steel or copper ring installed through the nasal septum of a domestic bull or sometimes other cattle, or a clip-on ring used for controlling other cattle for showing or handling, or the rings used to prevent pigs digging.

Contents

[edit] Full cattle nose rings

Bulls are powerful and sometimes unpredictable animals which, if uncontrolled, can kill or severely injure their handlers. [1][2] The nose ring assists the handler to control a dangerous animal with minimal risk of injury or disruption by exerting stress on one of the most sensitive parts of the animal, the nose.

[edit] Uses

Control of the bull may be done by holding the ring by hand, looping a piece of twine through it, clipping on a lead rope, or clipping on a bull pole (bull staff). A rope or chain from the ring may be attached to a bull's horns or to a head-collar for additional control.

For an aggressive bull, a short chain may be left hanging from the ring, so when the bull ducks in threat he stands on it and so is deterred from attack.

[edit] Construction

Bull rings are commonly made from a pair of hinged copper semi-circles, held closed by a small brass bolt whose head is broken off during installation. If a ring needs to be removed (for example if the bull has grown out of it), it is cut or unscrewed. Bull rings are usually about three to five inches (about 8 to 12 cm) in diameter, depending on the size of the bull.

[edit] Installation

The ring is normally installed when the bull is 9 to 12 months of age.[3] It is usually done by a veterinarian, who pierces the septum with a scalpel or punch. Self-piercing rings (with sharp ends designed to be pressed through the septum and then pulled together with a screw) have been available for many years; these are also usually installed by a veterinarian rather than the farmer himself. [4][5] .

[edit] Temporary cattle nose rings

[edit] Calf-weaning ring

Calf-weaning nose rings or nosebands provide an alternative to separating calves from their mothers during the weaning period. They have plastic spikes which are uncomfortable for the cow, causing her to reject the calf's efforts at suckling. Similar rings are used to prevent cows from suckling each other, and weaning nose rings are also available for sheep and goats. These nose rings (usually made of plastic) clip onto the nose without piercing it, and are re-usable.

A spiked ring which prevents suckling
A spiked ring which prevents suckling

[edit] Bulldogs

Self-locking or spring-close show-lead nose rings, or bulldogs, are removable rings that do not require the nose to be pierced. They are often used on steers and cows, along with a halter, at agricultural shows, or when handling cattle for examination, marking or treatment. They stay shut until released, and usually have a loop for the attachment of a cord or lead-rope. They give similar control to a bull ring without the need for permanent installation.

Show-lead nose ring (bulldogs), and bull-holder on the right
Show-lead nose ring (bulldogs), and bull-holder on the right

[edit] Bull tongs

Bull-holders or bull-tongs have a plier action and are used for short periods on grown cattle when they are being mouthed or drenched. A chain, rope or strap keeps the grips closed and may be passed over a bar at the front of a head bail to elevate the head. The thumb and forefinger may also used in this way on smaller animals.

[edit] Pig rings

Unrung pigs dig keenly with their snouts, and such digging may be undesirable in some circumstances – for example pigs put out to graze are capable of turning over the grass turf of a whole field in a short time. Nose rings make digging uncomfortable for the animal, although a rung pig is still able to forage freely through leaf litter and surface vegetation. Pig ringing may sometimes be required by local regulations, as when pigs are turned out for pannage in public woods (such as on the New Forest in southern England).

Pig rings consist of open copper wire rings with sharp ends, about one inch (about 2.5 cm) in diameter. They are clipped to the rim of the nose, not through the nostrils. Typically an adult pig will be given three or four rings, as they may sometimes be dislodged.

[edit] History

Historically, the use of nose rings for controlling animals dates to the dawn of recorded civilization. They were used in ancient Sumer and are seen on the Standard of Ur, where they were used on both draught cattle and equines.[citation needed]

[edit] Bull handling in the show ring

Many show societies require bulls over 12 months to be led with a nose ring, and other cattle to be led with nose grip (bulldogs) for safety reasons. Several methods exist for handling a bull with a ring installed. One method of leading a bull is to have one person either side of the bull with both halter lead ropes through the ring, [6] but a safer practice is for one handler to use a rope and the other a bull-staff attached to the ring.[7][8]

Charolais & Murray Grey bulls on parade with nose rings and a show lead ring, Walcha Show
Charolais & Murray Grey bulls on parade with nose rings and a show lead ring, Walcha Show

A bull may be led by a rope tied through the ring, although a halter (headcollar) is usually also used so as not to rely unduly on the nose ring for control. If the bull has horns the lead rope may be fastened around those and then passed down through the nose ring.

[edit] Bull handling and nose rings on the farm

Most dairy or beef farms traditionally had at least one, if not several, bulls for purposes of herd maintenance. [9][10]. The handling an aggressive, powerful animal was a practical issue with life-threatening consequences for the farmer.[11].

Bulls respond well to a good stockman
Bulls respond well to a good stockman

It is estimated that 42% of all livestock-related fatalities are a result of bull attacks, and fewer than one in twenty victims of a bull attack survives. [12]Dairy breed bulls are particularly dangerous and unpredictable; the hazards of bull handling are a significant cause of injury and death for dairy farmers in some parts of the United States.[13][14] The need to move the bull in and out of its pen to cover cows exposed the farmer to serious jeopardy of life and limb. [15] Being trampled, jammed against a wall or gored by a bull was one of the most frequent causes of death in the dairy industry prior to 1940 [16]. As suggested in one popular farming magazine, "Handle [the bull]] with a a staff and take no chances. The gentle bull, not the vicious one, most often kills or maims his keeper." [17]

When allowed outside its pen, the bull typically was kept in a halter connected by a strap snapped into the ring in his nose for ease of control. [18] In the bull pen, the use of a ring connected by a cable to a fixed point was recommended as a means of controlling and securing the bull while allowing a degree of movement by the subject bull.[19] If the pen was strong enough, the bull could be turned loose, and if needed, placed in a stanchion. [20]

Generally the use of both a ring and a halter, and management of the bull by two people, is the preferred method for controlling the bull. One current veterinary text still recommends the use of a staff in addition to the halter:

Many handlers rely on a nose ring to control a bull. But a ring in his nose is no good unless you have a bull staff and use it. A bull staff is a pole with a snap in the end that clips to thte bull ring. Leading a bull with a staff gives you a lot more handling power as the bull can't get any closer to you than the length of the staff allows. Leading him only by a chain in the ring lets him run over you at will.[21]

Typically, a bull was led by a wooden staff with a steel end that snapped into the ring. [22]A long rigid steel or wooden bull staff locked into the ring could also be used to push a bull out of a pen without requiring the handler to enter the pen for cleaning or feeding. [23] Because of the risk that the bull may drive the staff into the handler if he misbehaves.[24] many handlers prefer to avoid their use nowadays.

Farmers who lacked an assistant, or a staff, had no choice but to adopt other means. Some farmers elected to move their bulls by tying a rope to the ring and tying the other end of the ring to a farm tractor, providing both motive power and a degree of protection from the angry bull[25]. The efficacy of this technique is doubtful, and may depend on the size of the tractor and of the bull; one authority has "seen a bull lift the front end of a tractor like a toy".[26]. Others used dogs and horses. Not all farmers could afford specially designed and manufactured bull handling products, which were not readily available until after c. 1980. The experimental improvisation of techniques for bull handling, as in many aspects of family farming, was a common practice. As an example, another technique, the Geier Hitch, allowed a single individual to control a bull, but often resulted in the maiming of the bull's reproductive organs and therefore failed to accomplish its principal objective, transportation of a sexually intact bovine either to market for sale or to a neighboring farm for purposes to procreate for compensation[27][28][citation needed].

In some regions most bulls do not have nose rings unless they are to be exhibited and they are generally driven about as other cattle would be. [29] Most cattle breeders recognize the importance of looking after expensive bulls that are expected to improve herds and profits for them. In the United States, good bull manageement and safety practices require caution in handling beef and dairy bulls, and use of the nose ring and chain is a recommended precaution for modern farmers as well. [30][31]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Jack Albright, Why and how to read a cow or bull, Hoard's Dairyman Magazine, W.D. Hoard and Sons Co., Fort Atkinson, Wis., (Nov. 2000)
  2. ^ Dairy Care Practices: Animal Care Series, Dairy Workgroup University of California Cooperative Extension (2008)
  3. ^ Dairy Care Practices: Animal Care Series, Dairy Workgroup University of California Cooperative Extension
  4. ^ C. Dalton, Noseringing a Bull
  5. ^ Dairy Care Practices: Animal Care Series, Dairy Workgroup University of California Cooperative Extension (2008)
  6. ^ Land Newspaper, Rural Press, Richmond, 20 March 2008 - p. 68
  7. ^ Bucks County Agricultural Health and Safety Policy
  8. ^ Bridgend County Show Health and Safety Policy
  9. ^ U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Yearbook 1922, Government Printing Office, Washington D.C. (1922), pp. 325-28 (noting a national on-farm bull population of over 600,000 "scrub" bulls in addition to a multi-year supply of "pure bred" bulls)
  10. ^ O.C. Gregg, Ed., Minnesota Farmer's Institute Annual No. 15, Pioneer Press, St. Paul, Minn. (1902), pp.129-32 (recommending the keeping and testing of sires for dairy herd improvement).
  11. ^ Jack Albright, Why and how to read a cow or bull, Hoard's Dairyman Magazine, W.D. Hoard and Sons Co., Fort Atkinson, Wis., (Nov. 2000)
  12. ^ Canadian Farming Administration, Handling Livestock Successfully, 2000
  13. ^ Larry D. Jacobson, Extension Agricultural Engineer, Safe Work Practices on Dairy Farms, University of Minnesota Extension Services (1989)("During the last 10 years, 12 farmers in Minnesota were mauled and gored to death by dairy bulls").
  14. ^ Cumberland Count (Pa.) Sentinel, Shippensburg, Pa., February 12, 2008 A farmer in Southampton County, Michigan, was killed by a 2000 pound Holstein bull in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, in February, 2008, prompting comments from experts ranging from "never trust a bull" to "always take a dog with you" when handling a bull.
  15. ^ Alvin H. Clement, We Gotta Have More Jails, The Writer's Club Press, New York (1984-87), at pp. 79-80. A humorous description of moving a cow to a neighbor's Jersey bull for breeding purposes, and the use of a 12-foot bull staff to get the loose-running bull under control after he had already spotted the cow
  16. ^ O.C. Gregg, Ed., Minnesota Farmer's Institute Annual No. 15, Pioneer Press, St. Paul, Minn. (1902), at p. 125; The James Way, The James Manufacturing Co., Ft. Atkinson, Wisc. (1914), p. 103
  17. ^ Helpful Information for Dairymen, The Farmer Webb Publishing Co., St. Paul, Minnesota, Mar. 12, 1927, p. 6
  18. ^ O.C. Gregg, Ed., Minnesota Farmer's Institute Annual 15, p. 126, Pioneer Press, St. Paul, Minn. (1902)
  19. ^ The James Way, The James Manufacturing Co., Ft. Atkinson, Wisc. (1930), p. 114
  20. ^ The James Way, The James Manufacturing Co., Ft. Atkinson, Wisc. (1914), p. 103
  21. ^ C.E. Spaulding, D.V.M. & Jackie Clay, Veterinary Guide for Animal Owners, Rodale Press, Inc., Emmaus, Pa. (2d ed. 1998), p. 27.
  22. ^ An example of a bull staff
  23. ^ The James Way, The James Manufacturing Co., Ft. Atkinson, Wisc. (1914), at p. 103
  24. ^ V G Cole, Beef Production Guide, Livestock & Grain Producers Association of NSW, 1978
  25. ^ Sara De Luca, Dancing the Cows Home: A Wisconsin Girlhood, Minn. Hist. Soc. Press, St. Paul, Minn. (1996) pp.99-100 (moving a heifer with a tractor)
  26. ^ C.E. Spaulding, D.V.M. & Jackie Clay, Veterinary Guide for Animal Owners, Rodale Press, Inc., Emmaus, Pa. (2d ed. 1998), p. 27.
  27. ^ M. Cotter & B. Jackson, Voices of America: Growing Up on a Minnesota Farm, Arcadia Publishing Co., Chicago, Ill. (2001), pp. 23-24 (driving a 1500 pound Hereford bull named "Domino" by repeatedly firing a shotgun loaded with birdshot into its rear end)
  28. ^ C.E. Spaulding, D.V.M. & Jackie Clay, Veterinary Guide for Animal Owners, Rodale Press, Inc., Emmaus, Pa. (2d ed. 1998), p. 27 (bull got a man down, knelt on him, and "ignored pitchforks stuck into him in an effort to get him away from the victim").
  29. ^ W A Beattie, Beef Cattle Breeding and Management, Popular Books, 1990
  30. ^ Kerri Ebert and Michael Dennis, Pa. Ag. Extension Service, Cattle Safety, National Ag Safety Database, 2001
  31. ^ B. Grove & A. Mills, Bulls on the Dairy Farm, Kansas State University, Oct. 4, 2002

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