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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
Mastitis
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<blockquote data-quote="farmerjan" data-source="post: 1537918" data-attributes="member: 25884"><p>The hard mass will probably never go away. I would also treat all 4 with dry cow treatment, and then just go on and raise her, and breed her or flush her. There is a good chance she will come in as a 3 teater, but that is certainly not the end of the world. Anything over a week treatment is a moot point unless you tried changing the anti-biotic. At this point, you have done what can be done. Her udder is a long way from her ovaries, so just do what you planned on as far as the genetics end goes. As alisonb said, it could be from flies, and this crazy weather can also cause some problems that you would never expect. But it is a good chance the bull caused it. There is also a good chance she will do fine as a cow with only 3 quarters.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="farmerjan, post: 1537918, member: 25884"] The hard mass will probably never go away. I would also treat all 4 with dry cow treatment, and then just go on and raise her, and breed her or flush her. There is a good chance she will come in as a 3 teater, but that is certainly not the end of the world. Anything over a week treatment is a moot point unless you tried changing the anti-biotic. At this point, you have done what can be done. Her udder is a long way from her ovaries, so just do what you planned on as far as the genetics end goes. As alisonb said, it could be from flies, and this crazy weather can also cause some problems that you would never expect. But it is a good chance the bull caused it. There is also a good chance she will do fine as a cow with only 3 quarters. [/QUOTE]
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