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Bloat or Lightning????
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<blockquote data-quote="randiliana" data-source="post: 226551" data-attributes="member: 2308"><p>We lost 2 cows on Fri night/Sat. We were thinking bloat, although it was questionable, since the remainder of the herd were all normal looking. The cows are on an Alfalfa/Grass pasture, and we have had problems before, however, the alfalfa is all fairly mature and seems to have a lot of fibre in it. Of course when we found them they were extremely bloated up, but whether that was just from death, or if they bloated first I am not sure. The other thing though is that I can't recall a thunderstorm (they are within 1/4 mile of the house), but of course we could possibly have slept through it. Also, on the bloat score, I was out to check them Fri evening just before dark, and there was no bloated animals then.</p><p></p><p>One cow was along the fence line (actually she was on the wrong side of the fence) and literally laying on her back with all 4 legs in the air. The only marks on her were some wire cuts presumably from when she went through the fence. Now this cow bloated on us last summer, and we saved her by putting a hole in her to let off the pressure, so she could have been prone to bloat.</p><p></p><p> The other cow was in a low spot (with lots of alfalfa) and again she had no marks on her BUT, part of her face looked to be eaten away, and part of the lower jaw bone was MISSING! Now, I could see it if something had eaten part of her face, but coyotes usually start at the other end, and they wouldn't have gnawed part of the lower jaw bone away I don't think, at least, not until she was mostly eaten anyway?! This cow was the one I posted about earlier (Air Bubbles) so her lungs were already compromised and it probably wouldn't have taken much of a bloat to kill her if that was the case.</p><p></p><p>There are a few reasons why we are questioning the cause of death.</p><p>1. the fact that cow #1 was right along the fence literally laying on her back.</p><p>2. Cow #2 is missing part of her jaw bone, and had no other marks on her.</p><p>3. There were NO signs of bloat earlier that evening in ANY animals on the place.</p><p>4. No-one else was showing ANY sign of bloat Sat. morning when we discovered the 2 deads.</p><p></p><p>So anybody have any ideas?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="randiliana, post: 226551, member: 2308"] We lost 2 cows on Fri night/Sat. We were thinking bloat, although it was questionable, since the remainder of the herd were all normal looking. The cows are on an Alfalfa/Grass pasture, and we have had problems before, however, the alfalfa is all fairly mature and seems to have a lot of fibre in it. Of course when we found them they were extremely bloated up, but whether that was just from death, or if they bloated first I am not sure. The other thing though is that I can't recall a thunderstorm (they are within 1/4 mile of the house), but of course we could possibly have slept through it. Also, on the bloat score, I was out to check them Fri evening just before dark, and there was no bloated animals then. One cow was along the fence line (actually she was on the wrong side of the fence) and literally laying on her back with all 4 legs in the air. The only marks on her were some wire cuts presumably from when she went through the fence. Now this cow bloated on us last summer, and we saved her by putting a hole in her to let off the pressure, so she could have been prone to bloat. The other cow was in a low spot (with lots of alfalfa) and again she had no marks on her BUT, part of her face looked to be eaten away, and part of the lower jaw bone was MISSING! Now, I could see it if something had eaten part of her face, but coyotes usually start at the other end, and they wouldn't have gnawed part of the lower jaw bone away I don't think, at least, not until she was mostly eaten anyway?! This cow was the one I posted about earlier (Air Bubbles) so her lungs were already compromised and it probably wouldn't have taken much of a bloat to kill her if that was the case. There are a few reasons why we are questioning the cause of death. 1. the fact that cow #1 was right along the fence literally laying on her back. 2. Cow #2 is missing part of her jaw bone, and had no other marks on her. 3. There were NO signs of bloat earlier that evening in ANY animals on the place. 4. No-one else was showing ANY sign of bloat Sat. morning when we discovered the 2 deads. So anybody have any ideas? [/QUOTE]
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