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Hello; I just wanted to write and tell you that Isabella my birthday present last October finally had her calf. I thought she was due the first week in May but I guessed wrong.
We came home from church today and found her in the field with her new calf hiding in the grass. Because of this wet spring the cattle can't keep up with the field.
She is a heifer and very very skinny. I would guess she might weigh 40 - 50 pounds. My husband could pick her up easily.
Now for the bad part, we had Isabella in the field with the beef cows -big mistake- when we got home the other calves were trying to nurse off her. Isabella was very nervous and very busy trying to keep the calfs off her :waa:
We immediately moved Isabella and calf in the yard and let them alone. It took most of the afternoon to get the new calf to nurse. I called the lady I bought her from and she told me that if she hadn't nursed by this evening to milk her out and at least get some milk down the calf. At five, we tied Isabella up, gave her some feed and squeezed out some milk and forced the calf on her. This was not as simple as it seems but we got the job done and the calf is nursing off Isabella and already perking up. I milked her out some more a few hours later and put that in the freezer in case we would need it. Also, about thirty minutes after the calf started nursing, Isabella began a stingy mucus discharge. I sure hope she doesn't have a placenta still in there.Does anybody know if that is normal? I will wait and watch for a little while longer. Other than that, she looks healthy and has warm ears.
I just was pretty excited and wanted to share the good news.
Thanks
Arkansas Transplant
We came home from church today and found her in the field with her new calf hiding in the grass. Because of this wet spring the cattle can't keep up with the field.
She is a heifer and very very skinny. I would guess she might weigh 40 - 50 pounds. My husband could pick her up easily.
Now for the bad part, we had Isabella in the field with the beef cows -big mistake- when we got home the other calves were trying to nurse off her. Isabella was very nervous and very busy trying to keep the calfs off her :waa:
We immediately moved Isabella and calf in the yard and let them alone. It took most of the afternoon to get the new calf to nurse. I called the lady I bought her from and she told me that if she hadn't nursed by this evening to milk her out and at least get some milk down the calf. At five, we tied Isabella up, gave her some feed and squeezed out some milk and forced the calf on her. This was not as simple as it seems but we got the job done and the calf is nursing off Isabella and already perking up. I milked her out some more a few hours later and put that in the freezer in case we would need it. Also, about thirty minutes after the calf started nursing, Isabella began a stingy mucus discharge. I sure hope she doesn't have a placenta still in there.Does anybody know if that is normal? I will wait and watch for a little while longer. Other than that, she looks healthy and has warm ears.
I just was pretty excited and wanted to share the good news.
Thanks
Arkansas Transplant