We had a very warm and muddy winter. Only now in February finally got some cold again. It's been a good month of mud before that. Even had +10°C in January, which is unheard of here.Great pics! Would almost expect alot more snow![]()
Yeah, slightly. Only now we finally finished building the shed and feeding only hay instead of haylage, as last season had too many big calves.Your calves look great. The cows seem to be in a lower body condition than what they normally are?
That whopper of a calf will make good use of mamas milk!Weighed both last blondex calves, heifer- 99lbs, bull calf 106,9lbs with the coat on.
Also mom's one and only little dairy cow also had blonde sired bull calf born two days ago. Was born unassisted and weighed 97lbs today.
View attachment 54586
The cow is a tiny one- in 1000-1100 lbs range at most, so calf looks huge compared to her.
That whopper of a calf will make good use of mamas milk!
Will mama raise more than one???
Love seeing your updates!
Did you not see that the cow is ''tiny''. She only weighs 1100 lbs. That puts the calf size a little more in perspective.
No, she will raise only hers and she is milked daily as well. The calf either will be adopted onto another cow if we will loose any in a following month or will be sold at ~1,5months age.That whopper of a calf will make good use of mamas milk!
Will mama raise more than one???
Love seeing your updates!
She has no jersey in her. We got her from the neighbor, which raised red dairy cows and used only his own bulls for years, so her size is mostly due to being inbred alot. She doesn't give much of milk, but is more than enough for our own needs.1100 lbs and tiny!
With a 97lb calf.
My 1100lb "tiny" jerseys would raise 3!
That cow does look a bit crossbred to me tho. Not full jersey. Can't see her udder in that pic either. Dern it