So my partner and I got a zebu cow (#1) who was already pregnant. Not long after, she gave birth to a heifer calf (#2). While #1 was nursing #2, she started wasting away badly and she became really emaciated. We eventually started supplementing her diet with syringe-administered minerals and nutrients, and she made a complete turnaround, going from skin and bones back to thriving.
Several months later we brought in a bull calf (#3) with the idea that he would eventually breed with #2. That worked out, but unfortunately #3 ended up dying and that’s really what I wanted to discuss here.
At first #3 was eating fine, but #1 started bullying him off feed and taking it for herself. That left him weak, so we separated him from #1 and #2 to make sure he could get enough food. Even with that, his condition never improved. He’d gotten too weak by then, and we didn’t give him the same supplements we had given #1 earlier.
My question is: is it common to have to separate young bulls from recently nursing cows and calves at feeding time to make sure they’re all getting what they need nutritionally, especially when the young ones are still developing? Did we fail to take precautions to prevent the loss of #2 is what I'm wondering.
Several months later we brought in a bull calf (#3) with the idea that he would eventually breed with #2. That worked out, but unfortunately #3 ended up dying and that’s really what I wanted to discuss here.
At first #3 was eating fine, but #1 started bullying him off feed and taking it for herself. That left him weak, so we separated him from #1 and #2 to make sure he could get enough food. Even with that, his condition never improved. He’d gotten too weak by then, and we didn’t give him the same supplements we had given #1 earlier.
My question is: is it common to have to separate young bulls from recently nursing cows and calves at feeding time to make sure they’re all getting what they need nutritionally, especially when the young ones are still developing? Did we fail to take precautions to prevent the loss of #2 is what I'm wondering.