Quote:
Originally Posted by JD Barleycorn
As a X NYKr I guess I have to forgive such a incredibly stupid statement. Cows get cold, cows need to eat and if that pasture is under four feet of snow then what do they eat? If the rancher can't get to the herd by truck or helicoper then they go hungry. I suggest you do some research on the great cattle kill off in the 1880s. Millions of cattle died and bones littered the plains for years. All I can say is think before you post.
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As you are a Kansas school janitor, I guess I have to expect such an incredibly stupid statement from you.
You are a complete ass. And once again you can prove it.
Starved to death? In 3 days? That goes to show how stupid you are. Or are you drunk again?
Why don't you think before YOU post?
Read the articles this time. It snowed LAST Thursday through Saturday. By Sunday, the temperatures were back into the 50s - almost 60 on Monday and Tuesday.
Cows don't starve to death in 3 or 4 days. YOU wouldn't starve to death in 3 days and you're a complete pansy.
It appears that they froze to death in high winds. They were probably all dead by Sunday when it warmed up. They may be related to bison, but they sure don't have the same toughness.
Key quote:
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The storm was accompanied by hurricane-force wind gusts, especially Friday night, which drove some herds seeking shelter miles from their ranches. A trail of carcasses left a gruesome sight, said Martha Wierzbicki, emergency management director for Butte County, in the northwestern corner of the state.
Parts of South Dakota are in cleanup mode after a strong winter storm pounded some areas. Kirsten Swanson of NBC station KNBN reports.
"They're in the fence line, laying alongside the roads," Wierzbicki
told The Rapid City Journal. "It's really sickening."
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They got driven away from their ranches in the blizzard and died of exposure.
Not starvation. Jackass.