Sorry to redirect but; In 98 or 99 we went to McGinleys dispersal in Gordon. We got there late ( I didn't know where the sale barn was) and had missed the two's and three's; they were selling solid-mouth cows after we got our number. We sat there about 15 minutes, and they cut three cows back to make somebody's load even. I don't remember if they cost $620 or $640, but I had spotted a neighbor, and I hoped his trailer wasn't full yet.
It wasn't. I hired him to do my trucking, which consisted of mostly waiting on a "ground-loader" trying to load 33 open-range Red-Angus looking cows to go to South Dakota. He must of been used to milder cows, because he tried three times before he finally sorted and gated them. I offered my neighbor a drink in the meantime, but he politely declined. We were next, and the chute help was tickled to see 24' backing up for three cows.
On his way home, he swung 225 yards off to the right, pulled through my gate, and we turned 'em loose! in 200 acres. I was in front on the scooter, and thanks to pretty hilly ground, they wore out about the property line.
I didn't check cows for three days (Feb, no calves even close) and when they saw the pickup, it had a bale on the back. By calving time I was able to tag all three of their calves, two on the way out (almost) and the third underneath my 86 F-250. They had calmed down alot!
My point is, relative to this post, when I bought 'em, they wore an 8, a 6, and a 4, on their left shoulders. And no she wasn't 4 or 5 .
One had two calves and checked (they setteled down) open; one lost her third calf, and I shipped her, and one had six calves for us, and brought $945 in Jan, 2004; bred.
Her shoulder read "4".