15 Abnormally Large Bulls That Actually Exist

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Publicado 2021-04-12
There are plenty of large animals in the world, like elephants, giraffes, and rhinos. But what about specific animal breeds that tend to be bigger than others of the same animal species? Bulls are a premium example of how wide-ranging this species is. From bulls with double-muscling to those weighing over 1,000kg on average, here are 15 abnormally large bulls that actually exist.

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Todos los comentarios (21)
  • @peggyt1243
    Without a doubt it would be difficult for a bull to give birth.
  • Might want to get your facts straight the bulls you kept showing at #11 is a Hereford I know this because I’m a fifth generation beef farmer and that’s what we raise on our farm
  • I guess Beefalo doesn't count or does it? I grew up in Oklahoma. When I was a boy/teen I worked at several Livestock auction salebarns. An auction is just a bunch of pens and gates and a viewing area and scale. The alley between the pens was 10 feet wide. One day they brought in a monstrously huge Bull off the scale I will never forget. He was older and docile and moved slowly. He was a longhorn mixbreed I believe--probably half Hereford. The animal was the largest I had ever seen. Over 7 feet at the shoulder and his massive horns were so wide the tips banged on the bars on both sides of the alley. (Hornspan over 10 feet!) The teen boys were trying to get him moving faster smacking him with pokers and whips. They were wailing on him and he didn't seem to give a crap at all. I was 35 feet in front of him opening and shutting gates to guide him to the jackpot pen. Next thing I know someone yells "LOOK OUT!" and I looked over my shoulder and the bull had closed a 35 ft gap in about 2 seconds and he was right on me with his head down and his nose right up my ass!! He cocked his head slightly to the side so he could rear up(cuz his horns were so wide he couldn't come up strait) his nose came up forcefully under me and launched me literally 12 feet into the air. In the air I made an acrobatic adjustment( I grew up with a trampoline and did Gymnastics). I went over the top bar (8 feet high) and landed in a pen that was tightly overpacked with shoulder to shoulder cattle!! AND as luck would have it I landed square on top the back of a young Bull in perfect riding position !!!(but I was backwards on him) All the boys paused a second and then a huge burst of laughter when they realized I was OK. The young bull was trying to buck me off but he couldn't move enough to do much. All I could do was hang onto his tail. This impromptu backwards bull ride made the boys laughter intensify into insanity and I too was laughing my head off! It turns out that a dumbass boy took a fiberglass cowpoke rod and cracked the enormous bull in the nuts with it trying to get him to move faster and this is what set off the gentle giant. I have a lot of stories from only a few short years handling cattle in that crazy place but THAT ONE takes the prize.
  • @BiornBear
    Your pronunciation of the breeds and flip flopping between standard and metric weights and heights is killing me lol. Don’t think I’ll be back.
  • @yaparairiro
    The first breed looks like they are in incredible pain.
  • @TstanDa-Man
    You should have finished with the Belgian blue That thing is amazing
  • @Rick-xe8bt
    Bison make the movie highlights at the beginning but not the list? What Da Frig? They can be over 2500 lbs too.
  • @jamesblonde2271
    Thats funny, our Angus's are quite small, Charolais the biggest in Ireland anyway, but not Angus, and they are bad tempered often, Charolais are so gentle my Grandads cattlemen would dump me into the Carolais bulls loose box as a sort of joke or to keep me outa the way if I was a nausince, (often). The intresting thing is the Bull, hand reared as is wise with bulls, was so worried about treading on a small child that it would carefully herd me into the cornor and trap me there with its horns, I had to be carefullnot to appear too distressed by this yreatment too, or the damn thing would comfort me in the same way it would a racaltricant calf, by licking me all over, especially the head, it was one thing to be trapped but to be soaked to the skin by a gently lowing giant slobbering three ton snugglebun was, to a small boy the ultimate "horror".
  • @stephenwade4976
    I once looked after store cattle, I had a favourite and you get to know what they're like personally.Loved every minute, if I could I'd own a few as pets.I was lucky enough to be a hand on a 32 acre field with barns and a vintage Massey Ferguson tractor.
  • My great-uncle had a huge Brahma bull that he named Double Ugly. That thing was massive and intimidating, but one of the most gentle bulls I’ve ever seen. It was no worry at all for children to walk or play around him and pet him. He was almost more of a pet than a breeding stock. Had a huge fenced meadow almost to himself and loved when people came to visit. Have you done a video on tiny animals? 🙃
  • Most farmers do not prefer longhorns. What a load of crap. There are some people that will raise them but most of the time it is for show. My father actually had about a half dozen longhorn.
  • What about Santa Gertrudis and Droughtmaster? I love the way that when the narrator mentions the cow of a breed... they show a bull (the pork sausages between the legs are a dead giveaway).
  • @rickrodrick1978
    Why don't you use one consistent weight and height description rather than switching between metric and imperial measures seemingly randomly.
  • @Jade-zt9td
    That all white ones that start with the chi are really beautiful too
  • Where I come from farmers also raise cattle. Dairy farmers rely on cows for their livelihood.
  • It depends on what kind bull it is and depends one what the type of cow used fourth in the agricultural field a dairy cow is not the same as a beef cow a beef cow is not the same as a bison a bison bull is not the same as a denim bull.