She’s Here….And, She Off!!!!

One of the things I love about farm life is the cycle of life and events.  Year after year, things are cyclical, repeatable, fairly consistent: breed cows, dry off cows, birth of calves, make sure calves are getting what they need, milk cows, move cows in and out of barn, move calves with and away from moms, etc.  However, there are always those events that make you scratch your head and say “I didn’t see that coming!” or “WOW! How can we prevent THAT from happening again?” But for the most part, calving has been fairly uneventful. Some calves have arrived earlier than expected and some were a little later than we thought they would be but other than that, there really haven’t been any surprises…UNTIL TODAY!

Caramel (Mocha’s daughter, Jersey’s granddaughter, for those of you who have followed our farm for awhile) was due to calve tomorrow. We have been watching her, expecting her to calve early but even as recently as last night, I saw no signs of impending labor, other than she had “bagged up”, which basically means her milk was coming in.  When Jeff went out to separate Hazel from Mocha at 6:00 this morning, he checked on Caramel and said “all was fine”. Imagine my surprise as I was pulling my milk cart to the barn to see a little black calf standing in the corral next to Caramel!  But that was only the first of many exhausting surprises this morning!

I ran into the house to grab my camera to get some pictures of her, thinking she had just been born.  When I returned with my camera, I realized she was already almost dry and was standing quite well on her own.  Caramel was quite fussed though! Now, just to fill  you in on an important detail, since we don’t milk Caramel, she doesn’t get the daily handling of coming in and out of the barn like our other bovine. She has been a bit of a loner, a little less social and a bit more skittery than the others, since the twin calves who would have been her buddies died when Heidi died in September of 2016.

Thinking we would protect Caramel and her calf by getting them into the barn where we could monitor her colostrum intake, apply iodine to her umbilical cord, etc., Micah picked up the calf and carried her with Caramel right beside them into Caramel’s stall.  Well, first of all, in all of the six previous calves, I have NEVER heard a calf bellow like this one did!  She was bellowing so very loud and constant. I think that kind of freaked Caramel out a little bit. When we got them into the stall, Caramel was quite agitated and the calf was running around and into the wall.  At this point the 10×10 stall became much too small and dangerous for them.  So we moved them back to the corral.  Boy, were we ever in for a surprise!

The calf ran around the corral and then to my utter shock and astonishment, she climbed right through the electric fence into the side pasture. I don’t know whether she got shocked or not, but I am suspecting she did, because she took off, running faster than I have ever seen a newborn calf run, all the way up the side pasture, with Micah running after her!

Now, if you read my previous post about Hazel getting through the electric fence tape that separates the side pasture from the front pasture, you will recall that I criss-crossed it so that she couldn’t get through.  Our second surprise came when she just barreled through that criss-crossed tape. Again, I don’t know if she got shocked or not, but she may have.

I thought once she got into the large front pasture, she would just stop from sheer exhaustion.  But NO!  She kept running and to my horror, she ran right through the front pasture fence, across the road and into the ditch and cornfield on the other side!  Poor Micah!  He has been sick with a bad cold but he just kept running after her! He finally caught up with her when she tripped and fell in the ditch on the other side of the road, right before heading into the cornfield!  Had she made it that far, I don’t know how we would ever have found her!  Micah caught her and kept her stationary while I ran back to the barn and grabbed a lead rope to put on her. I was so winded my chest hurt but I knew she would be tough to keep down for long, so I did my best to run back to Micah.

We got the lead rope on her and Micah carried her back across the road. He put her down in the grass so we could lead her back to the barn, because obviously no fence we have would keep her in! That little bull-headed heifer kicked and ran and tried to escape the entire way back to the barn.  We settled her back into Caramel’s stall just to give her a chance to rest and calm down. She had to be exhausted!

In the meantime, this little rascal had upset every single bovine on our farm…from great-grandma Jersey to her grandma Mocha (who was waiting in the stall to be milked), to her aunt Truffle and her great-uncle Oreo! They couldn’t figure out what this little calf was doing outside of the fence and across the road!

Eventually, we got Caramel and her calf settled together in the barn in Jersey’s stall since it is a bit larger. They seem to be doing ok for now.  Up until this calf, we have had the now-unfounded belief that the corral was a safe place for a new mama and her calf!  Now we know better!  I hope the craziness of her first few hours are all the drama we have for awhile.  I am exhausted!

 

 

 

 

 

Baby Bovine Behavior (also named The Hilarious Antics of Hazel)

Oh look at that precious face: beautiful and seemingly docile; but, do not let that gorgeous face fool you!  She is ornery and energetic as well as headstrong and fearless!  She took us on a romp this morning that should have been no big deal except for a few special circumstances coupled with her strong personality.

First, let me say, she will be three weeks old tomorrow!  From the first hour of her birth, I knew that she was different from Mocha’s previous three calves in that she was hitting “milestones” ahead of her sisters.  Some milestones she hit days before her older sisters.  She stood within her first hour. She only needed to be shown once how to nurse. She ran around Mocha in the stall within 24 hours of her birth. From her birth, she was too tall to duck under her mama. She drank from the water trough with her mom in the first few days.  The list goes on and on!

She is like the other calves in that she doesn’t like to have the lead rope put on and be forced to go somewhere, whether to the barn, to the pasture or from stall to stall in the barn. She plants her front feet and sticks her chin up in the air with a fierce determination to stand her ground.  In her first few days of life, she rewarded the person on the backside pushing her by defecating on them, which was a good thing as far as monitoring her food intake, but not nice for the person trying to push her to go where she didn’t want to go!

She is pretty independent too!  From her first hours, she just had this settledness and confidence about her. She doesn’t seem too bothered to be put in a separate stall while I milk Mocha.  The other calves would bellow and moo but for the most part, Hazel just lays down and waits until we come for her.

Well, her independence showed in full living color this morning.  For the past several days, she and Mocha have had the full run of the front and side pasture but since there isn’t much grass to be eaten in the back pastures right now, we had to move Jersey and Caramel to the front and put a second strand of electric fence tape across to accomodate Hazel’s small size, thinking she couldn’t get through, allowing she and Mocha to in the side pasture. (A little side note of history, last week, she ran right under the electric tape and had some crazy frolics in the front pasture while Mocha stood in the side pasture yelling for her, unable to get past the single strand of electric tape.)

This morning, that little independent miss just ran and broke through the electric tape and frolicked with her grandma, Jersey, and her older sis, Caramel, running around so fast that her body was literally at a 45 degree angle to the ground! She roused Jersey and Caramel up something terrible!  Caramel is due to deliver her own calf in about 8 days, so needless to say she doesn’t need to be frolicking in the pasture with her baby sis!

To make matters more crazy, while she was running around the pasture and avoiding being caught by me, (and I am talking around and around and around the pasture) Jersey decided to run interference for her by standing between me and her and then just as I would get close to Hazel, Jersey would take off which would clue Hazel in that I was getting close and off she would go again!  At one point, I was so frustrated I wasn’t sure if I was going to cry, yell or just double over in laughter.

I’m not really sure how long I ran around like a fool, chasing the illusive Hazel, but the thought did cross my mind “I now know why they lasso calves!”  I think it would be a skill that would have come in quite handy this morning!

Eventually, by putting Mocha back in the corral, Hazel could no longer overcome her innate desire to be with her mom, so she headed back to the corral as well. But, what a workout she gave us! I often think how cool it would be if some “eye in the sky” was videotaping the antics that happen here on the farm, so that we could relive them and have a good belly laugh from time to time!

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