[Ag-eq] Bonny

Nella Foster jellybeanfarm at gmail.com
Sat Jul 2 15:16:21 UTC 2016


Jewel:

I milk a drop or 2 out of her to see what it feels like.  Right before birth
the colostrum will be very thick and sticky.  As the young animal nurses the
milk gets thinner until it is regular milk.  When I milk out a drop or 2 now
it is thin and oily, so that means the colostum is not fully formed.  If I
start milking out larger amounts she may not produce the thick sticky milk
which is the most important for the new born calf.

This is how I understood the vets explanation.  He keeps some Jersey cattle
and tells me to leave her alone until she calves.  Then I'm to let the calf
have all it wants for the first few hours.  After that I can start milking
out the colostrum.  She will have more than just one calf needs.  I will
freeze the colostrum and am going to give it to some friends with a ranch.
They can use it for any orphan calves or if a cow doesn't have enough milk.

Nella

-----Original Message-----
From: Ag-eq [mailto:ag-eq-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Jewel via Ag-eq
Sent: Friday, July 01, 2016 11:33 PM
To: Agricultural and Equestrean Division List
Cc: Jewel
Subject: [Ag-eq] Bonny

Unless Bonny is having the litter as I suggested she might have been!  if
you were to milk off some colostrum to reduce the possibility of mastitis ,
would she not have ample to feed one calf? after all, the supply is not
static but is being replaced for the first 3 days of the calf's life before
it becomes normal milk.

Jewel 


_______________________________________________
Ag-eq mailing list
Ag-eq at nfbnet.org
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/ag-eq_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for Ag-eq:
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/ag-eq_nfbnet.org/jellybeanfarm%40gmail.com





More information about the AG-EQ mailing list