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<blockquote data-quote="murphranch" data-source="post: 3529287" data-attributes="member: 45833"><p>There is an invasion of seagulls east of kaw lake around apperson and Shidler. When I say 100,000s of them it could be even more. The birds have figured out that cattle cubes-we call it cake- is rather tasty and the sound of a feed truck siren or horn means time to eat.. They sit on the ice or float around and wait. As soon as the first siren is heard they find the location and start circling. As soon as the first cubes hit the ground they are picking it up. Several rancher have told me that these birds can clean up a ton of feed as fast as they can dump it and the cattle aren't able to eat. </p><p>Seagulls are a protected bird which is news to me and everyone else. This valuable information was learned after a few people got tired of the damn birds eating $1,000s of dollars worth of feed every day.</p><p></p><p>Sent from my LG-H700 using Tapatalk</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="murphranch, post: 3529287, member: 45833"] There is an invasion of seagulls east of kaw lake around apperson and Shidler. When I say 100,000s of them it could be even more. The birds have figured out that cattle cubes-we call it cake- is rather tasty and the sound of a feed truck siren or horn means time to eat.. They sit on the ice or float around and wait. As soon as the first siren is heard they find the location and start circling. As soon as the first cubes hit the ground they are picking it up. Several rancher have told me that these birds can clean up a ton of feed as fast as they can dump it and the cattle aren't able to eat. Seagulls are a protected bird which is news to me and everyone else. This valuable information was learned after a few people got tired of the damn birds eating $1,000s of dollars worth of feed every day. Sent from my LG-H700 using Tapatalk [/QUOTE]
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