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Health & Nutrition
Cow with hard quarter
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<blockquote data-quote="certherfbeef" data-source="post: 33205" data-attributes="member: 190"><p>I have a cow with a low udder. She has a hard quarter and it is slightly warm. She has a early may calf on her. She is a 1992 model and has thrown some really gooduns in the past. She is also short bred (came in on her own, so I bred her last week) High $ semen. Don't want to lose her and don't want her to have to grow wheels until I wean next year's calf. I don't know if she got stung or has mastitus. </p><p></p><p>Finally, to the question~~ can I use a fresh cow treatment like she is a dairy cow? The kind that comes in a tube and it put right into the quarter. Or is there some other method used for a beef?</p><p></p><p>I grew up on a dairy farm, so it is not in my nature to let it run it's course like these locals suggest here. I do not want to lose the cow!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="certherfbeef, post: 33205, member: 190"] I have a cow with a low udder. She has a hard quarter and it is slightly warm. She has a early may calf on her. She is a 1992 model and has thrown some really gooduns in the past. She is also short bred (came in on her own, so I bred her last week) High $ semen. Don't want to lose her and don't want her to have to grow wheels until I wean next year's calf. I don't know if she got stung or has mastitus. Finally, to the question~~ can I use a fresh cow treatment like she is a dairy cow? The kind that comes in a tube and it put right into the quarter. Or is there some other method used for a beef? I grew up on a dairy farm, so it is not in my nature to let it run it's course like these locals suggest here. I do not want to lose the cow! [/QUOTE]
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