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Baby cows are some of the cutest things in the world.Well, spoke too soon on our cow that's due. When we checked the ponds earlier, she was coming back from the creek looking okay. Then, we had lunch and I worked on a quilt. Hubby decided he wanted to take the tractor down to clear some snow back from around the hay feeders and put out some new hay so they cows would have a cleaner surface for laying down...#612 had her calf and it was pretty cold. We brought back the car and loaded the calf in the back and brought it to the house to dry off and warm up. It eagerly took a warm bottle and although the front ankle and knee joints are still stiff, he does try to get up and down on his own. Roger is out moving hay and will pull an old truck out of the barn near where the cow is so we can put them together in that shelter.
Here is the bull calf with Roger using a hair dryer on the legs and our helper cleaning him up after his bottle. Calf probably weighs in at 85 - 90 pounds//Red weighs 84.
Resting after warming up til we get the pen finished in the old barn. At least it has electricity and I can hang a heat lamp outside one of the cattle panels.
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Thanks for the encouragement! I remember Sunshine's story. This morning when I went to check on the girls with the young calves, they were all in a gully area with great sunshine and good wind blockage. Funny you mentioning about the cow positioning herself as a wind block...I saw that with the new born bull calf. He is doing well and looking really good! I will keep an eye for signs of pneumonia.Bardies...so glad to hear the calf was able to nurse quickly. mother's milk is so much better than the manufactured. I keep bags of dry colostrum in the freezer to help preserve it. Yes, a 12 hour window is best for calf survival. The normal temp is 106 and shivering is the way the calf warms itself. When we bring one in, dampened towels in the microwave help to warm up the legs since the body heat focuses on the core. Frostbite damages the ears and tail as well as the lower legs. the umbilical cord will thaw and drops off when dried and the freeze won't affect the process. Iodine in the umbilical cord helps with infection. Also, because chilled, watch the calf for signs of pneumonia.
Our calf that was stepped on and nearly frozen last spring was given Gallimycin in her tube feeding until she was strong enough to get up and nurse on her own...that was a two week process of us milking the mother and hand feeding the calf. Mom was a first timer and really wanted her baby. She cleaned it and kept it nurtured while we fed it for her. Sunshine is now 600 pounds at 7 months of age..stub-tailed and has one toe on her back foot. Her ankle on that foot doesn't bend like normal, but she is heathy and strong.
For young babies like your two day old...if mom is giving good milk and is keeping the calf near her, she will be the wind break. But a windbreak is helpful if you can't get her and the calf in to a barn of shed. We have had calves born in freezing weather that the mothers clean them quickly and the calves spring up minutes from birth. Within hours after feeding, they are trying to buck. It all has to do with calf vigor and mothers' experience.
We now pen up first time mothers so we can offer assistance or a warm dry enclosure until we see the mothers tending their calves. At 24 hours, a good bonded pair can go out to pasture.
We run 100 mother cows with calving in both Spring and Fall.
You are doing so many things correctly...sounds like you are doing a great job.
So glad you (Roger) found him in time! - funny how sometimes things just work out the right way? He's huge! Mine probably only weighed 60 lbs or so. I love the long hair on him. Keep us posted please.Well, spoke too soon on our cow that's due. When we checked the ponds earlier, she was coming back from the creek looking okay. Then, we had lunch and I worked on a quilt. Hubby decided he wanted to take the tractor down to clear some snow back from around the hay feeders and put out some new hay so they cows would have a cleaner surface for laying down...#612 had her calf and it was pretty cold. We brought back the car and loaded the calf in the back and brought it to the house to dry off and warm up. It eagerly took a warm bottle and although the front ankle and knee joints are still stiff, he does try to get up and down on his own. Roger is out moving hay and will pull an old truck out of the barn near where the cow is so we can put them together in that shelter.
Here is the bull calf with Roger using a hair dryer on the legs and our helper cleaning him up after his bottle. Calf probably weighs in at 85 - 90 pounds//Red weighs 84.
Resting after warming up til we get the pen finished in the old barn. At least it has electricity and I can hang a heat lamp outside one of the cattle panels.
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