SMN Herf
Well-known member
I am continually amazed at what some breeders put up with in their cows.
The bad udders, lack of mothering ability, bad dispositions etc.
Last spring I had a couple bulls I wanted semen checked early and the vet had two anugs cows there penned up. My bulls were checking them out pretty closely, but the vet just laughed and said she is in the process of induceing these two black cows. Apparently they both prolapsed last year before they calved and they thought if they induced them early, they wouldn't have to sew them up. Never would have beleived it either if I hadn't witnessed it myself.
I don't own a set of hobbles, never use Ace, and about 75% of the time I can get calves up and nursing without headgating my heifers or cows.
These cows that don't claim calves or won't let calfs nurse is bad genetics. Get rid of them and save yourself the trouble. I remember growing up having some of the problems you guys are talking about, but since running my own herd, they only had one chance to do it and they were gone. Culling does reduce the problems. I can't remember the last time I had a cow that wouldn't claim her calf or let it nurse. Maybe it is gentecic, maybe it is management as I calve out in the open when weather cooperates so the udders stay cleaner.
I have lived and culled by the rule that if they need help for other than a weather issues, they won't be here long. That is one of the reasons why I am considering calving later into May and then string my bulls through the winter and then sell them as May coming twos. The extra feed I feed the bulls would be more than offset by the feed savings I would get by calving later.
I have always wondered why the oldtime Hereford breeders put up with the things they did.
The bad udders, lack of mothering ability, bad dispositions etc.
Last spring I had a couple bulls I wanted semen checked early and the vet had two anugs cows there penned up. My bulls were checking them out pretty closely, but the vet just laughed and said she is in the process of induceing these two black cows. Apparently they both prolapsed last year before they calved and they thought if they induced them early, they wouldn't have to sew them up. Never would have beleived it either if I hadn't witnessed it myself.
I don't own a set of hobbles, never use Ace, and about 75% of the time I can get calves up and nursing without headgating my heifers or cows.
These cows that don't claim calves or won't let calfs nurse is bad genetics. Get rid of them and save yourself the trouble. I remember growing up having some of the problems you guys are talking about, but since running my own herd, they only had one chance to do it and they were gone. Culling does reduce the problems. I can't remember the last time I had a cow that wouldn't claim her calf or let it nurse. Maybe it is gentecic, maybe it is management as I calve out in the open when weather cooperates so the udders stay cleaner.
I have lived and culled by the rule that if they need help for other than a weather issues, they won't be here long. That is one of the reasons why I am considering calving later into May and then string my bulls through the winter and then sell them as May coming twos. The extra feed I feed the bulls would be more than offset by the feed savings I would get by calving later.
I have always wondered why the oldtime Hereford breeders put up with the things they did.