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Heifer mauling new born calves ? Injured new born
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<blockquote data-quote="Lannie" data-source="post: 1773665" data-attributes="member: 8202"><p>This from a starry-eyed animal lover who bends over backward to give an animal a second chance, so take with a grain of salt.</p><p></p><p>It's been two days this cow has been trying to kill her calf? I understand that heifers sometimes are surprised when they see their first calf. In my experience, the most they'll do is keep circling to keep the calf in front of their nose, and they have trouble latching on to a teat. But I've never had one ram or otherwise try to kill her calf. And the surprised circling behavior lasts minutes to a maximum of a couple hours, not days.</p><p></p><p>If you're going to bottle feed the calf, start now. The longer she stays on her mom, the less chance she'll be willing to take a bottle later. So just switch now, and get rid of the mom. Did I say that out loud? Why, yes, I did. I wouldn't keep a cow like that. Way too much extra work involved with supervised nursings (even if you <em>weren't</em> having shoulder surgery), and then what if she does it again with her next calf? You'd have to do all this baloney all over again, and will definitely want to get rid of the cow then. If she was some special pedigreed something that you really wanted calves out of, that would be different. If she's "just another herd member," man, I'd get rid of her.</p><p></p><p>I have a different situation than most of you here, with just one or two milk cows, so I can do things that would just be a pain in the butt for someone trying to manage a big herd, but seriously, even I wouldn't keep a cow that tried to kill her own calf.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Lannie, post: 1773665, member: 8202"] This from a starry-eyed animal lover who bends over backward to give an animal a second chance, so take with a grain of salt. It's been two days this cow has been trying to kill her calf? I understand that heifers sometimes are surprised when they see their first calf. In my experience, the most they'll do is keep circling to keep the calf in front of their nose, and they have trouble latching on to a teat. But I've never had one ram or otherwise try to kill her calf. And the surprised circling behavior lasts minutes to a maximum of a couple hours, not days. If you're going to bottle feed the calf, start now. The longer she stays on her mom, the less chance she'll be willing to take a bottle later. So just switch now, and get rid of the mom. Did I say that out loud? Why, yes, I did. I wouldn't keep a cow like that. Way too much extra work involved with supervised nursings (even if you [I]weren't[/I] having shoulder surgery), and then what if she does it again with her next calf? You'd have to do all this baloney all over again, and will definitely want to get rid of the cow then. If she was some special pedigreed something that you really wanted calves out of, that would be different. If she's "just another herd member," man, I'd get rid of her. I have a different situation than most of you here, with just one or two milk cows, so I can do things that would just be a pain in the butt for someone trying to manage a big herd, but seriously, even I wouldn't keep a cow that tried to kill her own calf. [/QUOTE]
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