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Okay, we're definitely gonna be getting her more antibiotics that are the right dose
Yeah, I agree with what @Travlr said, and I think you are doing right by getting more antibiotics and the right dosage.
Too much at stake to no treat it. If an animal dies it doesn't matter if it's resistant or not.
 
Yeah, I agree with what @Travlr said, and I think you are doing right by getting more antibiotics and the right dosage.
Too much at stake to no treat it. If an animal dies it doesn't matter if it's resistant or not.
Agreed, I have a lot invested in her. She's a super nice show heifer and donor prospect.
 
None of the vets seem to really care. We have bad vets in our town, our good vet is 2+ hrs away.

Don't have any places lower elevation. We're all the way at 8500ft
If you have vets in your town, you're luckier than most.
I also have vets in my town that a lot of people consider to be "bad vets"
They get that reputation because they treat the animals for the problem and not the owner's diagnosis of the problem. Always be sure that you treat your vet with the same respect you would your doctor. They went to school for a long time to be knowledgeable enough to practice, and work in terrible conditions on patients that can't say what hurts. Give them a break and understand that they cannot diagnose anything on the phone, or necessarily fix a problem you say you have. They are the experts and should be treated as such. You'd be surprised how good they actually are if you give them respect, give them what they need, and let them do their job. Even if you think they are mistreating your precious bovine.
 
If you have vets in your town, you're luckier than most.
I also have vets in my town that a lot of people consider to be "bad vets"
They get that reputation because they treat the animals for the problem and not the owner's diagnosis of the problem. Always be sure that you treat your vet with the same respect you would your doctor. They went to school for a long time to be knowledgeable enough to practice, and work in terrible conditions on patients that can't say what hurts. Give them a break and understand that they cannot diagnose anything on the phone, or necessarily fix a problem you say you have. They are the experts and should be treated as such. You'd be surprised how good they actually are if you give them respect, give them what they need, and let them do their job. Even if you think they are mistreating your precious bovine.
I'm not in any way trying disrespect them, or trying to tell them what's wrong with her. First vet I said what she was doing.
Second vet I told her what she's doing and what we've done.
 
Could something have got in with her or could she have tried to jump the fence and injured herself ?
 
I'm sorry. I know I should bite my tongue, you are maybe new at this....but....if you OWN livestock, you should be equipped to treat something that gets sick...which includes having a supply of meds for any problems. Plain old Penicillin should be on hand.
I had a sick looking calf last summer, went searching for the bottle of penicillin, label said it expired 5 years ago. Seems I don't doctor very often.
 
With a 104 degree temperature and hard breathing I'd definitely be contacting a vet and getting more antibiotics. There are a few over the counter antibiotics still available if no vet will sell any.
 

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