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navel treatment
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<blockquote data-quote="Jeanne - Simme Valley" data-source="post: 736297" data-attributes="member: 968"><p>That is correct. Having two calves suck her is literally sucking her inside out - especially if she is a decent milker. Might be the only thing you can do since you are not around to feed her seperately, would be to pull the extra calf & ship it.</p><p>You are correct to want to deworm her - but - why would she be so much more "wormy" than the rest of the herd? Worms (unless a super overload) don't usually make a cow drop BCS that quickly. MILKING more than her intake of nutrition might.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jeanne - Simme Valley, post: 736297, member: 968"] That is correct. Having two calves suck her is literally sucking her inside out - especially if she is a decent milker. Might be the only thing you can do since you are not around to feed her seperately, would be to pull the extra calf & ship it. You are correct to want to deworm her - but - why would she be so much more "wormy" than the rest of the herd? Worms (unless a super overload) don't usually make a cow drop BCS that quickly. MILKING more than her intake of nutrition might. [/QUOTE]
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