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Vet's preg check accuracy?
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<blockquote data-quote="cow pollinater" data-source="post: 848484" data-attributes="member: 14661"><p>All of the vets that I work with on a regular basis can blindly call a calf within a two day range. Every one of them is also capable of finding a thirty day calf but none of them will tell you that they can find a thirty day calf accurately every time. <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite8" alt=":D" title="Big grin :D" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":D" /> I'm also really good at ignoring the occassional string that comes out of an "open" cow and the puss discharge from the occasional "pregnant" cow.</p><p>For those of you who don't arm your own cows, you'd be amazed at how easy it is to be wrong inside of a cow. :nod: Big mistakes all the time are a real problem and might be a good reason to find a new vet but a missed small pregnancy every now and then from a bull breeding with no information just comes with the territory. </p><p>I got my A$$ chewed thoroughly a few days ago for breeding a cow with a ninety day calf and I've been breeding a hundred head a day for the last ten years so I do know what a pregnant cow feels like. She rode like a hot cow and felt fine so I bred her and never looked at my records(why would I look, she's in heat and feels good) but she darn sure had a ninety day calf... I checked her myself after my chewing. :frowns: Mistakes will happen but it doesn't mean that the guy who made the mistake doesn't know what he's doing. I'd much rather take my chewing and bee more careful and still have a good customer who let me know he wasn't happy than lose a customer who would likely wind up firing his next breeder for the same thing since that breeder would't have any warning that there was a problem until it was to late either.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cow pollinater, post: 848484, member: 14661"] All of the vets that I work with on a regular basis can blindly call a calf within a two day range. Every one of them is also capable of finding a thirty day calf but none of them will tell you that they can find a thirty day calf accurately every time. :D I'm also really good at ignoring the occassional string that comes out of an "open" cow and the puss discharge from the occasional "pregnant" cow. For those of you who don't arm your own cows, you'd be amazed at how easy it is to be wrong inside of a cow. :nod: Big mistakes all the time are a real problem and might be a good reason to find a new vet but a missed small pregnancy every now and then from a bull breeding with no information just comes with the territory. I got my A$$ chewed thoroughly a few days ago for breeding a cow with a ninety day calf and I've been breeding a hundred head a day for the last ten years so I do know what a pregnant cow feels like. She rode like a hot cow and felt fine so I bred her and never looked at my records(why would I look, she's in heat and feels good) but she darn sure had a ninety day calf... I checked her myself after my chewing. :frowns: Mistakes will happen but it doesn't mean that the guy who made the mistake doesn't know what he's doing. I'd much rather take my chewing and bee more careful and still have a good customer who let me know he wasn't happy than lose a customer who would likely wind up firing his next breeder for the same thing since that breeder would't have any warning that there was a problem until it was to late either. [/QUOTE]
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