California Livestock Trailer Requirements: What Every Hauler Needs to Know
Hauling livestock in California is not as simple as loading your animals and hitting the road.
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Hauling livestock in California is not as simple as loading your animals and hitting the road.
Hauling livestock across New Mexico’s open roads comes with a clear set of legal responsibilities that go well beyond simply loading animals and hitting the highway.
Transporting livestock across Tennessee roads comes with a clear set of legal responsibilities — and getting them wrong can mean fines, out-of-service orders, or worse, harm to your animals.
Hauling cattle, hogs, horses, or sheep across Minnesota roads is not as simple as loading up and hitting the highway.
Moving cattle, hogs, horses, or other livestock across Louisiana roads involves far more than loading animals and driving.
Wisconsin is one of the nation’s top agricultural states, and moving cattle, hogs, sheep, goats, and other animals across its roads is a daily reality for thousands of farmers, dealers, and commercial haulers.
Hauling livestock across Kentucky’s roads involves far more than hitching a trailer and heading down the highway.
Nebraska ranks among the top cattle-producing states in the country, which means livestock trailers are a daily fixture on its county roads, state highways, and interstates.
Hauling cattle to a sale barn, moving hogs between farms, or trailering horses to a new pasture — every one of those trips puts you under Pennsylvania’s livestock transportation laws the moment your rig rolls onto a public road.
North Dakota’s agricultural economy depends on the safe, legal movement of livestock across its roads and highways.
Florida is home to one of the largest agricultural industries in the Southeast, and livestock haulers are a constant presence on its highways and rural roads.
Hauling livestock across North Dakota roads involves far more than loading animals and pulling onto the highway.
Hauling cattle, hogs, horses, or poultry across Georgia roads is more regulated than many producers realize.
Hauling animals on Michigan roads is not as simple as loading up and pulling out of the driveway.
South Dakota’s agricultural economy depends on the safe and legal movement of livestock across its highways, and the rules governing that movement are more detailed than many haulers expect.
Hauling livestock across Oklahoma roads involves far more than hitching a trailer and loading your animals.
Oklahoma ranks among the top cattle-producing states in the country, which means livestock trailers are a common sight on state highways, county roads, and interstate corridors every single day.
Missouri ranks among the most active agricultural states in the country, with nearly 88,000 farms raising cattle, hogs, poultry, and other livestock across two-thirds of the state’s land.
Moving cattle, horses, hogs, or poultry down a Tennessee highway involves far more than hitching a trailer and hitting the road.
Colorado’s ranching and agricultural economy depends on the safe, legal movement of livestock across the state’s highways and rural roads.