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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
Runny Nose & not eating 12 day old
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<blockquote data-quote="milkmaid" data-source="post: 519793" data-attributes="member: 852"><p>Regardless of if you bring new calves in now or later, you should keep all the calves separate until they're at least a month or so old... bottle calves have a strong tendency to want to suck on something, anything, and will suck on each others' ears, tails, navels, and anything else they can get a hold on. If you're in a cold climate, the calves can and will lose their ears and tails to frostbite, and sucking on navels can result in hernias or navel infections.</p><p></p><p>Keep 'em separate.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="milkmaid, post: 519793, member: 852"] Regardless of if you bring new calves in now or later, you should keep all the calves separate until they're at least a month or so old... bottle calves have a strong tendency to want to suck on something, anything, and will suck on each others' ears, tails, navels, and anything else they can get a hold on. If you're in a cold climate, the calves can and will lose their ears and tails to frostbite, and sucking on navels can result in hernias or navel infections. Keep 'em separate. [/QUOTE]
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Runny Nose & not eating 12 day old
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