Tag: cattle vaccinations

  • Vaccinating your Calves

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    Red Angus steer calf grazing on October 31st, 2014. Enjoying the nice fall weather.
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    November 2nd, 2014. Hello, winter.

    Today’s post will focus on vaccinating your calves. Stay posted for our next post on weaning your calves.

    As I am typing, we are just a week away from Christmas and winter has arrived on the Wood Farm.  Normally, having lots of snow in mid-December is nothing out of the ordinary in our neck of the woods.

     

    This winter, though, our farm underwent a winter wonderland on the evening of November 1st.  Yes, November not December.

    I think Mother Nature got her months mixed up.

     

     

    Last year, our cows grazed on pasture up until the first day in December and we had hoped to have the same fall-time grazing success this year.   We had to start our cows on hay bale grazing on November 8th.

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    Hay bale grazing started on November 8th, 2014.

     

    All of our grand ideas of stretching out our fall grazing and thus, our winter hay bale supply (save $30/day) flew out the window into swirls and swirls of snowflakes.  Oh well, that’s how it goes with farming. I strongly believe that having a flexible attitude with large doses of patience and positivity can take you very far in this crazy, wonderful world of beef cattle farming!

     

    Getting back to the focus of this post (vaccinating your calves), though, we had no clue that winter would come a month early.  On that wintery day, as we watched the first snow of the season fall and pile up all around us, we felt so fortunate that the two very critical tasks to have done before winter – vaccinating and weaning calves – were done.  We vaccinated our calves on September 21st and weaned them October 4th (Post on weaning coming soon).

    Vaccinating Calves

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    Our alley, chute and head gate.

    We chose to vaccinate our calves a few weeks before we weaned them.   These calves had not yet been worked through an alley, chute and head gate and just going through that maze had the potential to be a slightly stressful event for them.  We had no desire to couple that process with weaning.

     

     

    After consulting with our veterinarian, we decided to do the vaccinations ourselves.  Unfortunately, I do not have any pictures from this as it proved to be a very high-energy event.  The whole process took eight hours to complete, and I wore our 30lb son in the backpack for half that time.

    September 21st was the big day.  We had 10 Angus calves to vaccinate, ranging in age from 2 1/2 – 5 months old. Jer and I worked these calves by ourselves and boy, did we learn some important lessons.  Lessons on what NOT to do but at the same time, some affirmation that parts of our process were working.   I just can’t stress enough how important it is to remain calm, patient and positive when handling cattle, especially these young calves.  If you are getting upset and impatient, you better believe that calf is fielding those emotions from you and you are going to have a fight on your hands getting that animal down an alleyway and into a head gate.

    We administered the following vaccinations to each of our 10 calves:

    1. 2ml of 20/20 Vision 7 with spur (pinkeye).   Given subcutaneously in the upper neck.
    2. 2ml of Presponse HM (prevention of bacterial pneumonia).  Given intramuscular in the upper neck.
    3. 2ml of Bovi-Shield Gold 5 (for a range of respiratory diseases).  Given subcutaneously in the upper neck.
    4. 3ml Multimin90 (mineral supplement).  Given subcutaneously in the upper neck.
    5. 16ml of Ivermectin Pour on (wormer).  Applied along the top line.

    In addition to the vaccinations, we were able to get weights on nine of the calves.  We had been pleased with the calves’ performance and growth over the summer and the weights provided us with some much-needed affirmation that we were well on track to have 500+ pound calves for sell in November.

    When we finished up that night, we came inside and over dinner, we brainstormed ideas for making the whole vaccination process more effective, streamlined and calmer for both human and animal.  We talked about what went wrong and what went right.  The day was not perfect.  We always try not to let our emotions get the best of us when working with our animals but we stumbled a bit that day.  In the end, though, we always try to remind ourselves that at least we have cattle; yes, we sometimes get frustrated and impatient but at least we have cattle.  Could be a lot worse.  We could not have cattle and we just couldn’t imagine life like that.  🙂

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    Coming to your pasture soon…Weaning.

     

    We could check vaccinating calves off our fall to-do list.

     

    Next on the list?  Weaning.  What an adventure and yet another, learning lesson, that would turn out to be.

     

     

  • Pregnancy Check: Is That Heifer Really Pregnant?

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    Our veterinarian, Dr. Simon Alexander, pregnancy checking one of our heifers.
    November 2013.

    Our last few posts have been bouncing back and forth between our current calving season and our breeding season last summer.   Today, we bridge that gap a bit with a post on what we like to call “Is that Heifer Really Pregnant? – aka Pregnancy Checks.”

     

     

    Check out our past Breeding and Calving posts below:

    Cattle Breeding Series – An Introduction

    Deciding your breeding season

    Selecting your bull

    Lessons learned in selecting your bull

    Active Breeding: What Now?

    The Calving Bucket

    It’s Calving Time: Part 1

    Colostrum aka “Liquid Gold”

    It’s Calving Time: Part 2

    Our last post in our Cattle Breeding series found us nearing the end of our 60-day breeding season, wondering if all 10 of our heifers really were pregnant.  From our observation sessions, we felt reasonably certain that eight of our 10 heifers had been bred.  If not for those sessions, we really would have had very little clue as to what occurred during those 60 days. Our time spent with the herd and the observations that we recorded did (and continue to) provide priceless insight into the dynamics of our herd and all it costs us is a bit of our time…..

    As we neared mid-September, our breeding season was coming to a close and we had winter on the mind.  Specifically, we were coordinating our winter hay supply and putting together our winter hay bale grazing strategy.  In the course of sorting through the logistics and crunching the numbers, it became increasingly evident that we simply could not afford – financially and otherwise – to carry open heifers through the winter.  If one of our 10 heifers was not pregnant, she would be on the truck come Fall.

    Since we had very little experience with pregnancy checking, we contacted our veterinarian, Dr. Simon Alexander of Exeter Veterinary Services to schedule a pregnancy check for all 10 heifers.  We scheduled for Dr. Alexander to visit our farm in mid-November; he would conduct the pregnancy checks and we would also administer several vaccines at that time.

    That gave us roughly two months to prepare for the visit.  Roughly two months to figure out how exactly we were going to restrain these heifers in order for them to get pregnancy checked and to get their shots!  The vet sure wasn’t going to be able to walk out to the pasture and simply “check” them where they stood!  If only.  Ha!  If you remember our post where we talked about our lack of a tractor??  Well, we also lacked a holding pen with an alleyway and a squeeze chute with a headgate.  These are items that we were fully aware we would need in order to work our herd – no mater if the herd is 10 animals or 100.   When you work with large livestock, like cattle, you need a safe working environment for both you, the animal and your veterinarian.

    While we would LOVE to have an alley and sweep system with a connected squeeze chute and head gate, we are far, oh so far, from ever being able to afford that system.  That is the dream.  So, keeping with having an open-mind and being able to be innovative, creative and flexible – on a fixed budget – we came up with an alternative.  A very labor intensive alternative for Jeremiah but one we were confident he could accomplish.

    Jeremiah was going to build our very own version of an alley and sweep system.  At some point Jeremiah will write a post on his adventure in building our very own alley and sweep system.  For now, suffice to say, this project ended up being a huge, monumental undertaking and it would consume every free second he had for those two months but the final product was so entirely worth it. I was so incredibly proud of what Jeremiah accomplished.  The entire structure was built with wood he cut from our property and milled on our sawmill.  Once all the wood was cut, he spent night after night, well past the sun set, putting the whole system together, nail by nail.  It was unbelievable what he created.

    With the completion of our alley and sweep system, we could check-off on one very critical component to our system. We still needed sort sort of squeeze chute and/or headgate to attach to our alley and sweep system.  While we don’t live in a part of the country known for beef cattle, beef cattle farmers are here in northern Maine and they band together when a fellow farmer needs help.

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    We were able to borrow a portable livestock scale with a headgate and squeeze.

     

     

     

     

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    Our homemade alley and sweep system with attached squeeze chute and headgate.
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    Alley and sweep system.

     

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    Our completed homemade alley and sweep system with attached squeeze chute and headgate.

     

     

    Our system was now complete.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    We were ready for our vet visit and…….

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    to discover the fate of our herd and our entire operation.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    We constantly spoke of all of the what if’s that could happen during our vet visit;  most notably, we feared that one after one, our vet would announce “Not pregnant”, until all 10 were deemed open at which time we would probably assume the fetal position and cry.  A LOT was riding on these pregnancy checks. Our operation could end before it really even started.  That was a very real fear for us.  Jeremiah and I lean towards more of a proactive approach, and we do not shy away from a bit of risk. We took a leap of faith with breeding 10 heifers to a yearling, unproven, bull.

    We were about to find out if our leap of faith would produce rewards or sad, sad tears.

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    Our first heifer to be pregnancy checked, little UL 220.
    Dr. Alexander of Exeter Veterinary Services

    The day had finally arrived and Dr. Alexander was here, about to climb into the chute and pregnancy check our first heifer.  Ironically, the first heifer in line was UL220.  She is our youngest heifer and she ended up being our first heifer to have her calf this spring.

     

    That first pregnancy check was a very big positive, literally and figuratively.

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    and another one pregnant!

     

     

     

    One by one, each heifer was guided into the squeeze chute, pregnancy checked and then given their vaccinations.

     

     

     

     

    Each heifer was given three vaccinations:  1) Decotmax for parasites, 2) MultiMin90 as a mineral supplement and 3) Bovi-Shield Gold 5 for a range of respiratory diseases.

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    Just another night on the ranch for baby Wyatt!

    My responsibilities during this time were to document the event, with both written and visual records, and watch our 9-month old son. So, I strapped our son to my back, grabbed my notebook, pencil and camera, and I was good to go!

     

     

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    Jeremiah administrating a vaccination.
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    Jeremiah working the headgate and Derrick guiding a heifer into the chute.

     

     

    Jeremiah assisted in administrating the vaccinations as well as operating the headgate and keeping the entire operation running smoothly and safely.

     

     

     

    Our good friend, Derrick, assisted with encouraging the heifers to work through the alleyway, into the squeeze chute.

     

     

     

     

    All of our fears of the vet yelling out “Not pregnant” were quickly stomped out when one after one, our vet called out “Pregnant!”.

    Folks, we had 10 pregnant heifers!!  100% pregnancy rate.  We probably still would have curled up in the fetal position and cried – for joy – if we had thought of it.

    We celebrated by getting a pizza, uploading pictures and transferring our notes from that night to our computer!

    We were certainly not in the safe yet, though.  We needed 10 live and healthy calves on the ground in the spring.  The hard work was starting, we needed to get these pregnant heifers and their unborn calves through a northern Maine winter!