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  2. Horn (anatomy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horn_(anatomy)

    Horns from cattle, water buffalo, and sheep are all used for commercial button making, and of other species as well, on a local and non-commercial basis. Horn combs were common in the era before replacement by plastic, and are still made. Horn needle cases and other small boxes, particularly of water buffalo horn, are still made.

  3. Jimmy Anderson (bullfighter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jimmy_Anderson_(bullfighter)

    He was known for wearing his distinctive purple cowboy hat with plastic bull horns and red wig while performing during the latter years of his career, and was one of the last PBR bullfighters to wear clown make-up and baggy outfits before they switched to wearing sport jerseys and shorts in 2003.

  4. Steerhorn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steerhorn

    The steerhorn (German: stierhorn, also known in English as a cowhorn or bullhorn) is an extremely long medieval bugle horn. The instrument could be as much as 3 feet long. [1] It was used from "antiquity" into the middle ages. [1] The instrument has been used both orchestrally and in war.

  5. Nose ring (animal) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nose_ring_(animal)

    A bull pole or bull staff is a wooden or metal pole with a special hook on the end that snaps onto the nose ring. [10] The James Safety First Bull Staff (1919) was a five-foot-long steel tube with a lock hook on the bull's end operated from the handler's end of the pole. [11]

  6. Megaphone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Megaphone

    Page from the Codex canadensis, by Louis Nicolas, circa 1675 to 1682, showing a native North-American chief using a megaphone made of bark. Before it became a megaphone, the bull horn or cow horn or steer horn was a signaling device or bugle used from antiquity.

  7. Livestock dehorning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livestock_dehorning

    Arguments against dehorning include the following: Dehorning (removing fully grown horns) without the use of anesthesia is extremely painful to the animal. [8] A 2011 study that surveyed 639 farmers found that 52 percent of farmers reported that disbudding caused pain lasting more than six hours, that only 10 percent of the farmers used local anesthesia before cauterization, 5 percent provided ...

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  9. Team roping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Team_roping

    Once the steer is caught by one of the three legal head catches, the header must dally (wrap the rope around the rubber covered saddle horn) and use his horse to turn the steer to the left. The second roper is the "heeler", who ropes the steer by its hind feet after the "header" has turned the steer, with a five-second penalty assessed to the ...

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