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Cattle Boards
Breeding / Calving Issues
Dead calf
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<blockquote data-quote="Findleyfarms" data-source="post: 485104" data-attributes="member: 7548"><p>Well my perfect record for the year has been broken. I checked the cows before dark last night and didn't see any signs of impending birth. This morning I find a calf frozen to the ground. Sigh. My red angus cows are just so difficult to detect labour in. I moved two cows to the cow/calf side after watching changes in the vaginal area (swollen and floppy), only one had a full udder. The one with the empty udder really didn't appear all that pregnant and my hubby even doubted she was going to calf. I trusted the signs I had seen and moved her. She was the one who gave birth last night.</p><p></p><p>Without a vet is there anything I should look for to know if it was stillborn? It is laying in the now frozen puddle of water from the mom and doesn't look like it had moved from where it had been born. Without having been there all I have are questions...was it the calf or the mom? I'm just heartbroken.</p><p></p><p>Any red angus folks out there? This is the second red to give birth with no signs of labour, no mucous, no mooing, no going off on their own, no laying down, and they seem to eat great right up to the birth. Any advice on detecting labour in these girls?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Findleyfarms, post: 485104, member: 7548"] Well my perfect record for the year has been broken. I checked the cows before dark last night and didn't see any signs of impending birth. This morning I find a calf frozen to the ground. Sigh. My red angus cows are just so difficult to detect labour in. I moved two cows to the cow/calf side after watching changes in the vaginal area (swollen and floppy), only one had a full udder. The one with the empty udder really didn't appear all that pregnant and my hubby even doubted she was going to calf. I trusted the signs I had seen and moved her. She was the one who gave birth last night. Without a vet is there anything I should look for to know if it was stillborn? It is laying in the now frozen puddle of water from the mom and doesn't look like it had moved from where it had been born. Without having been there all I have are questions...was it the calf or the mom? I'm just heartbroken. Any red angus folks out there? This is the second red to give birth with no signs of labour, no mucous, no mooing, no going off on their own, no laying down, and they seem to eat great right up to the birth. Any advice on detecting labour in these girls? [/QUOTE]
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