Friday, January 23, 2015
Baby Boom
There was a baby boom on the County Line yesterday: Introducing the first four members of the Class of 2015!
The babies belong to our heifers. Heifers are first-time mothers. Our 21 heifers were born in 2013 and are having their first calves this winter. We keep the heifers in a lot closer to the house so we can check on them more often. Sometimes, first-time moms have trouble with the birth and need some assistance. We can usher a heifer having problems into the barn, where we use a calving pen to help keep her and us safe while we pull the calf.
The official "due date" wasn't until January 28, so Randy was a little surprised to find three babies when he fed hay yesterday morning. The fourth was born later in the day. He had been checking the heifers, but the frequency of those checks will increase, now that calving has officially begun. He charged flashlights yesterday, since the checks will involve late night and early morning visits to the corral.
It was a beautiful day, full of sunshine and warmer-than-usual temperatures for late January. It was a nice day to be born. And it was nice for the farmer and his assistant, too, since we weren't traipsing around in snow or cold temperatures, trying to warm up baby calves.
Randy attached tags in the new babies' ears. I recorded each calf's number and the number of its mama. This year, the tags begin with a "5," indicating that the calf was born in 2015.
After this little guy was tagged, Randy had a new friend. We were actually trying to figure out which heifer was his mother (and it appears he was ready to help, doesn't it)?
This little one was the newest in the crew. She was still wet and a little wobbly.
Randy didn't have to jog to catch her for her big yellow "earring."
Here's hoping for more good weather for our 2015 new arrivals. Calving for the 97 cows in our herd (the moms who've already had babies) is set to begin in February.
Only 114 more to go! (OK, that sounds like a lot when I look at it that way.)
In 2012, I wrote "The Miracle of Birth," which showed photos of the guys pulling a baby calf. Click here to read that post and see the photos. However, it would be great if we didn't have to pull any calves this winter. Time will tell.
Three new healthy babies is a good surprise on a warm sunny day.
ReplyDeleteGood Luck with calving season; hard to believe it's that time of year again.
I was away from the computer this weekend. Those first four on Thursday were our only ones so far. We'd sure like to have more during this nice weather.
DeleteOur weather has been nice too. Saturday the temps were good, but the wind was ferocious. Sounds like old man winter is planning a return this weekend.
DeleteHope you have a fabulous week!
Love it! They are so darn cute. Our genetics specialist on campus said they are considering adding a new EPD on gestation, because bulls are proving that they will sire babies that are coming several weeks early - as you have seen :)
ReplyDeleteLove this! The calves are so cute. Let's hope all the other calves arrive with as little as fuss as these ones.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lynda. I love this time of year with the new babies, especially on nice winter days!
DeleteAwwww! They are so sweet. We have one calf in the heifers. We lost Nerdlys calf. :( the vet assumed he was just to early. So sad. I always cry when they loose a calf. Then I become determined to try to save them all.
ReplyDeleteContinued luck with calving!
Cheri
We hate losing calves, too. Hope you have good luck, too!
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