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Breeding / Calving Issues
swollen teats
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<blockquote data-quote="pauline" data-source="post: 495486" data-attributes="member: 7770"><p>Last year we bought an old hereford beef cow from a neighbor. Last Friday, she gave birth to a baby girl. I went to work on Friday so on Saturday morning I checked on mother and baby. The mother's three teats were all swollen and tight and reddish-brown looking. The baby slept a lot. When the baby finally got up and tried to nurse, she sucked on her mother's chest hair for 3 to 5 minutes in a row, as if she didn't know where to get milk. When finally she got around her mouth around the teats, she couldn't get the gigantic teats in her mouth. I did not see her nurse once. The mother's milk bag is flabby but the teats were swollen.</p><p></p><p>I gave the baby milk replacer and milked the mother and fed the baby throughout the night. The next day, I bought and gave her colostrum powder. After that, the baby stayed with the mother nursing on the one good teat occasionally, and I fed her milk replacer on the side. She passed out reddish semi-liquid stool.</p><p></p><p>After that, we stopped feeding her milk replacer because we couldn't catch her. She stayed with mother all the time sucking on the skinny teat she can put in her mouth. Miraculously, the good teats went from one, to two, to three and then all four teats now are soft and normal size and pink. The baby now nurses more often sucking on all 4 teats and she passes out small stools of brownish semi-solid.</p><p></p><p>Questions:</p><p>1. Is it a good move on our part to feed her with milk replacer while she could suck on one good teat? I'm thinking the abrupt change of diet caused the reddish stool.</p><p>2. Did the mother have mastitis? It seems that after the baby sucking on/massaging on the teats do some good to them.</p><p></p><p>Thanks</p><p>Pauline</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pauline, post: 495486, member: 7770"] Last year we bought an old hereford beef cow from a neighbor. Last Friday, she gave birth to a baby girl. I went to work on Friday so on Saturday morning I checked on mother and baby. The mother's three teats were all swollen and tight and reddish-brown looking. The baby slept a lot. When the baby finally got up and tried to nurse, she sucked on her mother's chest hair for 3 to 5 minutes in a row, as if she didn't know where to get milk. When finally she got around her mouth around the teats, she couldn't get the gigantic teats in her mouth. I did not see her nurse once. The mother's milk bag is flabby but the teats were swollen. I gave the baby milk replacer and milked the mother and fed the baby throughout the night. The next day, I bought and gave her colostrum powder. After that, the baby stayed with the mother nursing on the one good teat occasionally, and I fed her milk replacer on the side. She passed out reddish semi-liquid stool. After that, we stopped feeding her milk replacer because we couldn't catch her. She stayed with mother all the time sucking on the skinny teat she can put in her mouth. Miraculously, the good teats went from one, to two, to three and then all four teats now are soft and normal size and pink. The baby now nurses more often sucking on all 4 teats and she passes out small stools of brownish semi-solid. Questions: 1. Is it a good move on our part to feed her with milk replacer while she could suck on one good teat? I'm thinking the abrupt change of diet caused the reddish stool. 2. Did the mother have mastitis? It seems that after the baby sucking on/massaging on the teats do some good to them. Thanks Pauline [/QUOTE]
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