
12/11/04, 11:38 PM
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Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: VA
Posts: 1,554
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difficult birth
My neighbor called me tonight. He needed help with his cow.
He'd bought an Angus cow at a high dollar sale. She was bred to an expensive "calving ease" bull. She was a good looking cow and friendly, too.
However, she was having trouble with the calf. It wouldn't come. Only a foot was out.
He reached in and got the other foot turned out and we pulled, but it wouldn't come. He reached in and got the calf's head turned forward. With some strong pulls, the knees and nose showed, but no more. It was obvious the calf was dead.
We tied the calf's legs and attached the rope to my utility vehicle. With a steady strain and some help from her, the calf finally came. It took 45 minutes from the time we started. She'd been in labor for 12 hours.
Here's the hard part: the calf weighed 80 lb.! It looked like a month old calf. So much for "calving ease". The calf's head was enormous.
I told him that the next heifers he wants bred he should borrow a Dexter bull. My last Dexter calf weighed 26 lb.
We gave the cow penicillin and left her to rest.
Now how do we prevent mastitis since there is no calf to nurse? Is that ever a problem in Angus like it is in dairy cattle?
Genebo
Paradise Farm
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