У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно THIS GIANT BULL WAS REJECTED BY BREEDERS— BUT ONE MISTAKE SENT HIM TO A PLACE THAT SHOCKED EVERYONE! или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
THIS GIANT BULL WAS REJECTED BY BREEDERS — BUT ONE MISTAKE SENT HIM TO A PLACE THAT SHOCKED EVERYONE! Nabid is a four-year-old Charolais bull weighing 3,400 pounds with bloodlines worth $200,000 on paper—his sire was Frost King, a $500,000 proven producer, and his dam's lineage traces back to Canadian champions, making him theoretically one of the most valuable breeding animals in North America with genetics that should generate a quarter-million dollars annually in stud fees and transform any breeding program fortunate enough to own him. But despite his flawless conformation, perfect bone structure, and elite pedigree that cattle breeders dream about, Nabid has a catastrophic problem that makes him commercially worthless: he's dangerously aggressive, unpredictably violent, and has spent three years at Whitmore Champion Genetics in Amarillo, Texas destroying reinforced steel gates, charging handlers without provocation, and exhibiting such extreme volatility that four different experienced cattle managers have refused to work with him despite his extraordinary genetic value, leading Holden Whitmore—the facility owner who paid a fortune for Nabid's bloodline—to the devastating conclusion that this magnificent animal with championship genetics is fundamentally unsuitable for commercial breeding operations and must be either donated to a sanctuary or sent to slaughter because no amount of training, behavioral modification, hormone treatment, or facility redesign has made any difference in his aggressive temperament over three years of intensive intervention.After Bryce Carmichael—a legendary Oklahoma cattleman known for rehabilitating difficult animals—evaluates Nabid and declares him "fundamentally unsuitable for standard operations" because he's "claustrophobic" and "psychologically unable to tolerate the restrictions of modern breeding facilities" where bulls must accept small pens, constant human handling, and artificial insemination procedures, Holden makes the painful decision to donate Nabid to Northern Lights Animal Refuge in Anchorage, Alaska—a sanctuary with 800 acres of open space and minimal confinement that specifically requested large ungulates for educational programs, representing Nabid's last chance to live somewhere his temperament might be manageable even if his breeding potential is forever lost. Margot Vance, a livestock transport coordinator, arranges everything: specialized transport, veterinary health certificates, coordination with the Anchorage sanctuary, and complex paperwork including shipping manifests with destination addresses and facility codes—but in the rush to meet transport deadlines before Thanksgiving, Margot's assistant makes a critical clerical error, transposing two digits in the receiving facility's address code, changing AK-907-2847 (Northern Lights Animal Refuge in Anchorage) to AK-907-2487, which corresponds to a completely different location 115 miles north: Crow's Edge Wilderness Tours in Talkeetna, a tiny tourist operation run by Silas Crow, a 51-year-old former bush pilot who owns forty acres, keeps six horses and three beef cattle for "authentic Alaska ranch experience" photo opportunities with tourists, has zero experience with breeding bulls, zero facilities for handling aggressive animals, and absolutely no knowledge that 3,400 pounds of rejected, supposedly dangerous Charolais fury is currently on a three-week journey through Canada and up the Alaska Highway heading straight for his modest property.