gcreekrch
Well-known member
An 80 inch wingspan does help. :wink:
Silver said:Soapweed said:Silver said:Welcome back Bob. And yes, if you have a good method of getting a calfs head straight when it's nose is touching it's hip, I'm all ears. In my experience to this point, when I run across this situation I don't try very long before I dig out the scalpel and local anesthetic.
We had a cow in this predicament last spring. I checked on her, and realized she should be showing more progress because the feet had been showing for quite some time. I put her in the barn and into the headcatch, then put on gloves and worked on her for quite awhile with no success. Our oldest boy happened to be visiting and having supper with us that evening, so I called the house. Peach and he came up to the barn. Peach is very talented when it comes to getting a stuck calf out of a laboring cow, but she didn't have any better luck getting the calf than I did. I was debating which vet to call to make arrangements for a C-section, when our big strong blacksmith son asked if we minded if he gave it a shot. With sheer brute strength and the power of Peach's prayers, the calf emerged fit as a fiddle.![]()
I think I possess the strength..... perhaps it is my short arms that are the source of my misfortunes. :???:
gcreekrch said:I haven't invested in one yet but our vet has a glove that has velcro-like grips at the fingertips. He claims it improves grip by a whole bunch.
MsSage said:Welcome back Bob
I can see where soap gets his gift of gab :wink:
Love the stories keep them coming
Bob M said:I worked for Clyde Weber in the mid forties and he showed me a trick that has saved two or three cows for me and one of a friend that I happened on that had been trying to turn a head back. The fact that I wear a 37 inch sleeve length shirt gives me quite an advantage so I never gave up easy and before I started the following method had already worked long enough to realize the calf was dead.......
This is the proceedure: Hook on to one foot putting on pressure and start skinning the hide off the leg as it comes further out. It takes a lot of pressure but you finally have the hide off clear to the shoulder and the leg pulls off at the shoulder. Do the same proceedure on the other leg. That gives you plenty of room to get the head turned around and a rope around the neck by which it comes easily.
My experiences were before veterinarys were readily available. I recommend a caesarean over the above but if everything else fails it works!