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Dead calf, hard lesson learned
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<blockquote data-quote="TCRanch" data-source="post: 1328598" data-attributes="member: 24027"><p>The condensed version: after searching for 10 hours yesterday we finally found a missing calf. She was breathing a little hard but stood up, looked perky. No signs of illness, no messy behind, no snotty nose, no droopy ears . . . but clearly something was wrong because her mama had been bellowing for her all day - but had not checked on her & was a mile away. Decided to take her to the barn & she was bunky enough we had to use the Calf Catch to catch/load her. She was dead by the time we got to the barn, which takes all of 10 minutes.</p><p></p><p>We did not have the vet do a necropsy (and by this time it was almost dark & raining) but he believes she died from a Clostridial Disease, specifically Clostridum perfringes Type D. She was a heifer calf, one month old but already a good 200 lbs and comes from a lineage of enormous cows (we just sold her Grandma who clocked in at 2055 lbs). Type D is rare in cattle but definitely found in well nourished (primarily) beef calves nursing high-producing cows grazing lush pasture. We calved a little later this year & were blessed with a very mild winter/early Spring - and a lot of lush, green grass. We typically don't give the calves their first vaccinations until they are around 3 months old (also contingent on the spread of the calving season) but our vet recommended vaccinating them asap. Learned this one the hard way.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TCRanch, post: 1328598, member: 24027"] The condensed version: after searching for 10 hours yesterday we finally found a missing calf. She was breathing a little hard but stood up, looked perky. No signs of illness, no messy behind, no snotty nose, no droopy ears . . . but clearly something was wrong because her mama had been bellowing for her all day - but had not checked on her & was a mile away. Decided to take her to the barn & she was bunky enough we had to use the Calf Catch to catch/load her. She was dead by the time we got to the barn, which takes all of 10 minutes. We did not have the vet do a necropsy (and by this time it was almost dark & raining) but he believes she died from a Clostridial Disease, specifically Clostridum perfringes Type D. She was a heifer calf, one month old but already a good 200 lbs and comes from a lineage of enormous cows (we just sold her Grandma who clocked in at 2055 lbs). Type D is rare in cattle but definitely found in well nourished (primarily) beef calves nursing high-producing cows grazing lush pasture. We calved a little later this year & were blessed with a very mild winter/early Spring - and a lot of lush, green grass. We typically don't give the calves their first vaccinations until they are around 3 months old (also contingent on the spread of the calving season) but our vet recommended vaccinating them asap. Learned this one the hard way. [/QUOTE]
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