The milk
cow we have had for years, the matriarch if you will, had her calf on Friday
the 15th, in the mid-afternoon. This was unusual because she has always caved
on a holiday of some sort. I was really expecting the calf on Veteran's Day.
And as it turns out the calf was a little over-cooked--it really should have
been born a few days before--right about Veteran's Day. It is a bull calf and
we decided to call it A.W.O.L. because it didn't "report for duty" on
time. And he had to be retrieved, he wasn't coming on his own. He was a bit big
with a big head and his front feet were not in the right position. He got stuck
and we had to pull him. It wasn't easy, between the cow and Ron both giving
everything they had, that calf still almost didn't make it out. It was taking
so long we both thought the calf was probably dead. Ron is not a little guy. We
only managed to get one foot forward of the nose so the rope was only on that
one leg, and he was using all his weight and strength pulling. I wouldn't have
made a dent, I am half his size and am still coming back from a few years of
malnutrition. Ron was pulling so hard I thought he was going to pull the calf's
leg off, but at this point we didn't have hope for the calf. And then the
little guy, with just his head and one foot sticking out, opened up his eyes
and looked right at me. So the calf was still alive but still stuck and now we
were afraid of killing it but the cow was the primary concern. I really do not
know how to explain all this well, a stuck calf is something that kind of needs
to be experienced first hand to really understand, it goes beyond just the
standard "cow needs a little help so we gotta pull the calf." This
guy was *stuck.* Sometimes when it is this bad, in order to try to save the
cow, someone goes in and cuts the calf up to take it out in pieces. Either that
or the cow will most certainly be lost. But that did not prove to be necessary.
And since I already told you we named it I am sure you deduced that calf is
still alive. He was a bit slow coming to his feet but that was a very traumatic
birth soo…
But now
the cow. Even once the calf is out, the trauma of the birth is still an issue
for the cow. A pinched nerve during birth is common anytime a calf needs
pulled, let alone one this stuck; heck every once in a while it happens on an
normal birth. The pinched nerve issue will put a cow down because she can't
feel one or both back legs. If they stay down, they will get worse because
their own weight will start shutting off blood flow to the legs and you loose
them. If you can keep them up, sometimes the feeling returns and everything is
fine. Getting an animal that weighs roughly 1000 lbs. from a laying to a
standing position is not really something that a person can do without the help
of machines. And sometimes it injures the cow.
But Lily,
though unsteady, stayed on her feet after the birth. Heck, she is a tough Irish
gal. Everything seemed fine until Saturday midday when she was laying down more
and not getting up easy when coaxed. Then a few hours later she lay down by the
fence next to the creek bed and after getting a little time to rest was coaxed
to get up, she tried and couldn't. This is a problem. A bit later her rump
started to slide under the fence. Ron started calling around for help, we had
to get her out from under the fence and we had to get her up. While this was
going on she managed to get herself out from under the fence. What a good girl
she is. She was in stage 2 of milk fever, we should have noticed the signs in
stage 1, she drug it out longer than that stage usually lasts, she was dragging
out stage 2 pretty long too, thankfully. By the time a cow hits stage 3 the
chance of saving them drops significantly. Ron found someone with the stuff we
needed but it was most of the way to town to go get the stuff, treatment for
milk fever and these things called hip huggers that are used with a tractor to
lift a down cow. We also had a neighbor at ready with a tractor to use. But
since lifting an animal that size often does damage in itself the best thing to
do is give the med for milk fever and hope they get up on their own. We were
ready to cut the fence but we couldn't let her slide down the slope into the
creek. She made that unnecessary; she never was good at respecting fences
anyway. It did take two doses of the med but about 45 -50 min. after the first
dose she could be coaxed up. She looked around for just a moment and didn't see
her calf so she headed right to the calf pen, which she knew had to be where he
was if she couldn't see him, unsteady but with purpose she made her way there.
Of course he was there, she knows that where the calves are put for safety at
night, and by this time it was night. She started nosing the hay and started
eating. A bit later when Ron went out he gave her some grain in the calf pen
but she followed him out, took a big drink of water and walked right into the
milking stall -- where she believes she should eat.
Today she
is a little off her feed but is standing. We will give her another dose of the
treatment today if Ron can find a place on Sunday that sells it. If not I guess
a another special trip to town tomorrow and we will hope some molasses on her
feed, both making it more palatable and adding calcium, will get her going.
She is 12,
we have had her since she was under 6 months old. For the last 9 or 10 years
this gal has been giving us milk and meat (by way of offspring), she really
does a lot for our family, is part of it, and her loss would be horrible.
On another
note, hunting season, firearm, started this weekend (one of the reasons the cow
wasn't up on the hill when she went into labor and would have made the
situation deadly). But it is almost 70 degrees out, not good for hunting deer.
I am in a t-shirt. And good golly is it windy today. When I let the chickens
out this morning a gust hit that actually blew some of them up against the
fence. Sitting way down here in the holler means we don't usually get much wind
at all so to have gusts like that is incredible. I am glad I don't live on the
ridge.
4 comments:
Wow! That sounds really stressful, but I'm glad everyone is doing okay now. *hugs*
Thanks.
You were a big support last night. I appreciate that.
Oh, man! I'm so sorry that was so scary for you! It was scary just reading it! What a rough birth. Poor Lily. I know how much you care for her, I hope a new day brings improvement. Hugs from me, too! :)
Thanks. She is doing better everyday. She is still a little off her feed but is coming around on that too. She has always been a good mom but she seems to be a little over-attached to this one. I think it might be guilt because she was so sick for the first couple days with that second day being particularly bad. A human mom would feel some guilt even knowing it wasn't her fault she got sick. I really think that is what is going on with Lil' right now. She has always seen the calf pen as sort of a babysitter, the calf is safe in there and she can take a break. She won't leave this one in the calf pen. Tonight is to be the first time we shut the gate to the pen, thus separating them for the night so we can milk tomorrow. She usually walks the calf in and turns around to leave, we are probably going to have to force her out. Maybe not, we'll see.
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