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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
PERSISTENT scours in bottle calves
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<blockquote data-quote="raykour" data-source="post: 1140546" data-attributes="member: 16801"><p>The product I am using is some sort of electrolyte/meal replacer. It turns jelly like after about 15 minutes. It is called Arrest.</p><p></p><p>This morning I got 2 calves to take 4 pints of Arrest followed by 4 pints of milk replacer about 1/2 hour later. The weaker calf (who is also very small) took about 2 pints of the Arrest and 1 pint of milk. She is small (50 lbs?) and my tube feeder simply won't pass. </p><p></p><p>At at any rate, today every seems to be holding steady. </p><p></p><p>I am leaning towards rotavirus due to their age, and the fact that I seem to at some point have become infected with it also unless it is just a coincidence. Despite best efforts, having 3 squirting calves sucking on me, swinging their watery diarrhea tails, cleaning them, and caring for them constantly, it would not be too surprising.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="raykour, post: 1140546, member: 16801"] The product I am using is some sort of electrolyte/meal replacer. It turns jelly like after about 15 minutes. It is called Arrest. This morning I got 2 calves to take 4 pints of Arrest followed by 4 pints of milk replacer about 1/2 hour later. The weaker calf (who is also very small) took about 2 pints of the Arrest and 1 pint of milk. She is small (50 lbs?) and my tube feeder simply won't pass. At at any rate, today every seems to be holding steady. I am leaning towards rotavirus due to their age, and the fact that I seem to at some point have become infected with it also unless it is just a coincidence. Despite best efforts, having 3 squirting calves sucking on me, swinging their watery diarrhea tails, cleaning them, and caring for them constantly, it would not be too surprising. [/QUOTE]
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PERSISTENT scours in bottle calves
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