@nytimes: For seven years, Lee Meyer has been chauffeuring his 2,200-pound Watusi-longhorn mix named Howdy Doody, with its horns and head exposed to the open air, in a customized Ford Crown Victoria with the license plate “Boy Dog.” But the police had never been stopped him, Meyer said, until Wednesday morning when he drove into Norfolk, Neb., from his 15-acre ranch south of Neligh, about 35 miles away, with Howdy Doody. Meyer had just turned off the highway in what was supposed to be a test run for Howdy Doody’s appearance at Norfolk’s Oktoberfest when he noticed a police car behind him with flashing lights.
The New York Times
Region: US
Thursday 31 August 2023 22:42:33 GMT
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imelectric :
Howdy Doody, a watusi longhorn mix. My goodness… what a world!
2023-09-01 04:45:25
5
dollar$ighnloft.global r.r. :
.. haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa . y .....
2023-09-06 11:33:08
3
SWI swissinfo.ch :
Howdy Do that then??
2023-08-31 22:45:28
3
Valerie💙 :
@👹 me when I get my license
2023-09-10 01:36:54
2
haylie hill :
I love them both
2023-08-31 22:58:08
1
A l l g O N e :
Look at the back side of the car. The bull defecates all down the side of the car! 😳
2023-10-09 23:16:53
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giovanni29920 :
@The Humane Society of the US
2023-10-07 22:14:05
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giovanni29920 :
Thst poor steer. I wonder what his accommodations look like. I get the sense this steer is a tool used by owner to make money. I hope someone looks i
2023-10-07 22:12:37
0
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