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<blockquote data-quote="A6gal" data-source="post: 220550" data-attributes="member: 2034"><p>I have a mystery on my hands. Friends were replacings some windows I lost in the barn from the hail storm. When leaving the place they called me at work to say the cow I've been watching had calved. It was black with a white face. I explained it probably just looked black because it was still wet. (red beefmaster cow/bull). Got home checked on cow in pasture and she had a solid colored light red calf with her (no white face) and all was well, I thought. The next afternoon I heard a calf bawling from the brush in the general area where the cow had calved. Went to check and found a red calf with a white face recently born! This cow is about 9 years old and has never had twins before. I checked with neighbors and no one is missing a calf. They have angus and charlois. This cow is such a good mama, I can't imagine her abandoning a calf unless she got preoccupied with the second birth and forgot the first one. Gave milk replacer last night and this morning (didn't have colostrum on hand). Question....will it be okay to give colostrum after starting milk replacer? I think this calf may have nursed after birth because it sure didn't seem weak however, it was pretty hungry and took to a bottle pretty quick. I am 90% positive this calf is hers, but 10% still questioning. Wouldn't a calf be pretty weak if it hadn't nursed in 24 hours?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="A6gal, post: 220550, member: 2034"] I have a mystery on my hands. Friends were replacings some windows I lost in the barn from the hail storm. When leaving the place they called me at work to say the cow I've been watching had calved. It was black with a white face. I explained it probably just looked black because it was still wet. (red beefmaster cow/bull). Got home checked on cow in pasture and she had a solid colored light red calf with her (no white face) and all was well, I thought. The next afternoon I heard a calf bawling from the brush in the general area where the cow had calved. Went to check and found a red calf with a white face recently born! This cow is about 9 years old and has never had twins before. I checked with neighbors and no one is missing a calf. They have angus and charlois. This cow is such a good mama, I can't imagine her abandoning a calf unless she got preoccupied with the second birth and forgot the first one. Gave milk replacer last night and this morning (didn't have colostrum on hand). Question....will it be okay to give colostrum after starting milk replacer? I think this calf may have nursed after birth because it sure didn't seem weak however, it was pretty hungry and took to a bottle pretty quick. I am 90% positive this calf is hers, but 10% still questioning. Wouldn't a calf be pretty weak if it hadn't nursed in 24 hours? [/QUOTE]
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