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  • Hi, I’m Mike and this is Our Wyoming Life.

  • Coming up on Our Wyoming life, We say goodbye to an old and dear friend

  • Then I pretend I’m a cow and we learn exactly what goes into raising a bottle calf

  • And later, a calf is found in the pasture down and near death

  • Every year we lose cows, its inevitable.

  • But some cows that we lose hit just a little bit harder than others.

  • This week we lost our very first cow that I calved here on the ranch when we left our

  • corporate jobs to come back and help out.

  • Indulge me as we take a moment to say goodbye to number 1

  • We get requests every year from someone who will want to know if we end up with a bottle

  • calf, will we sell it to them to raise on their own.

  • Whether they want to start their own herd or they are just looking for a cow to raise

  • for beef.

  • We will usually sell a bottle calf, but not before fair warning.

  • Raising a calf is a lot of work.

  • You have to take the place of that cows mom, you have to feed them, clean them, make sure

  • they are warm, healthy and happy.

  • One of the most important things you have to do, is teach them how to cow.

  • Teaching a calf how to cow is hard, and the best way for them to learn how be a cow is

  • to get them around other cows.

  • We still have Bambi and Princess Bliss along with 80 and Gunther here in the corral and

  • they are going to help me teach Cupcake how to be a cow.

  • This is Cupcake, her mom had twins and because she was the first twin born, her mom didn’t

  • even know she was there and she was left for dead.

  • I found her lying in the field all alone and brought her in the barn where she has been

  • ever since.

  • Unfortunately we can’t keep Cupcake and raise her as a breeding cow, because she was

  • a twin and the other twin was a bull or boy calf, there is a 90% chance that she is infertile.

  • In most cattle twins, the blood vessels in the placenta are interconnected, creating

  • a shared circulation for both twins, male hormones pass from the male to the female,

  • and cause an underdeveloped reproductive system in the female.

  • So Cupcake will be going to auction, and because we don’t have another cow that has lost

  • a calf to try to graft her on to, she is our responsibility.

  • An the first thing she needs is food.

  • Calves need to eat, and they eat a bunch, hopefully your calf will have had colustrom

  • at birth from its mom, but if it didn’t then you have to take special measures to

  • make sure your calf gets all the antibodies and initial nutrients it needs.

  • If you think or know it didn’t get colustrom then you will need to feed it colostrum supplement

  • for the first week or so of its life.

  • Cupcake is a couple of weeks old now so she gets milk replacer, a powdered milk that we

  • get from the feed store.

  • Its mixed with water and put into this 2 quart bottle.

  • She will drink between 4 to 6 of these bottles a day, depending on her mood.

  • And yes, calves, like kids can be moody.

  • Shes in a stall in the barn, and hungry so we get her bottle to her, and after some work

  • she figures out what to do with it, and she mellows out a little bit.

  • A hungry calf can be a nuisance, especially when they figure out that you are the provider

  • of the food.

  • This head butting action that she is doing is an instinctual thing that she would do

  • to her mom, headbutting her moms udder in order to get the milk to drop down into the

  • teats for drinking.

  • She doesn’t realize that headbutting me or the bottle will not make the milk flow

  • faster, but she tries.

  • When she gets a bit bigger I will actually start feeding her from outside the fence,

  • keeping the fence between her and me, the reason is simple.

  • When she gets a bit taller, the headbutting can make for a uncomfortable situation, expecially

  • if you are guy.

  • If ya get my testicular crushing hint.

  • Heres another suggestion, when you get done feeding, run.

  • If you stay in the corral or stall, shes not going to leave you alone.

  • A calf is never full and yes they are adorable, exciting and fun, but they are still a lot

  • of work and they are stronger than they look.

  • Milk is also a laxative.

  • I bring that up for two reasons.

  • First, its important to keep a calfs living area clean, scooping out the poop will be

  • healthier for the calf and cleaner for both you and her.

  • Keep an eye out for diarrhea though, that can be a sign of scours, it will cause a calf

  • to dehydrate and eventually die, it is treatable but can be prevented by keeping her stall

  • clean and dry.

  • Second, I am now Cupcakes mom, doing all the motherly duties.

  • Except one, I wont lick her clean.

  • For some reason, calves don’t know to get their tail out of the way of their poop.

  • I guess that’s a learned behavior so we have to wash her rear end.

  • The poop can harden and can actually plug her up.

  • He mom would lick it off, we will use a bucket and water.

  • Shes fed, she clean and happy.

  • Now she gets to do something she hasn’t gotten the chance to do yet, in her entire

  • life.

  • She’s going to be going and playing with other cows and calves.

  • This is where she learns to be a cow, something I could never teach her.

  • By no means is this everything you need to know about bottle raising a calf, but it gives

  • you an idea how much work can go into it and also how rewarding it can be.

  • Calving continues and just because the weather has been nice doesn’t mean we still don’t

  • have to look out for calves in trouble.

  • Everytime I check cows, Im looking for a number of things, first and foremost, new calves,

  • making sure their mom dries them off and gets them up to suck.

  • Also, I’m checking on all the calves that are already born.

  • Calves will sleep and sleep hard, and they probably hate me, but I make sure everyone

  • is alive and ok, but when you roll up to calf who is down and out, you scoop them up and

  • away you go.

  • Back to the shop, where our assessment begins.

  • This calf is cold and hypothermic so the first thing we do is get some warm milk in its belly,

  • then it’s a shot of vitamins and antibiotics to give it a little boost.

  • After all that she goes in the warmer.

  • After we get its body temp up to normal range we can weigh her.

  • Shes light, about 50 lbs but that’s ok, her mom is a good mom and if we can get her

  • back to health she should be able to take care of her.

  • As we continue our evaluation of the calf, we can begin to understand why she was down

  • in the field.

  • She cant stand up on her own.

  • This could be a sign that she had a stressful birth or she could have been stepped on but

  • as you can tell her back legs are not able to support her weight.

  • After letting her rest for a bit, I give her some more milk, tubing her again as she is

  • still too weak to drink from a bottle.

  • Then she goes into the barn to a stall with Cupcake overnight.

  • The next morning, heading into the barn to check on our patient and we find her and Cupcake.

  • And the good news is that shes up and moving, Shes still really wobbly but shes up and that’s

  • all that counts.

  • Shes hungry too, so I feed her some bottle and then take her back out to her mom, where

  • she can take over and I can go check cows again.

  • The cycle repeats itself, over and over.

  • And sometimes it has a happy ending and sometimes it doesn’t . This week went from horribly

  • heartbreaking to making it all worth it in only a matter of one black fuzzball of a calf.

  • Sometimes that’s all it takes, that one thing to make you smile and appreciate all

  • you have.

  • Take the good with the bad, they both make you who you are.

  • That’s it for this episode.

  • Next week, its baby chicken.

  • We raise between 25-50 chickens all for their eggs and I hope you are here with me as we

  • help the smallest of chicks join our flock.

  • Subscribe, like and comment.

  • I cant wait to hear from you and I have a special request this week.

  • I am planning a viewer special type episode, in which I will answer your questions directly

  • . So if you have a question you would like answered during our viewers special email

  • it to me at ourwylife@gmail.com.

  • I’ll put the email in the description as well.

  • Have a great week and thanks for joining us in Our Wyoming Life.

Hi, I’m Mike and this is Our Wyoming Life.

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