Win, Win, Win ! ! ! Like my neighbor always said, 'practicality, patience, & persistence balanced by a learned and practiced eye' make all the difference. Quite a while ago(45+yrs) we were told the story of a well known, local Champion bull. Seems that a family breeding and raising purebreds had a twin problem. After discussing their workload and making some calls they donated one twin, a 6 day old, undersized, sickly bull calf to a couple of 4H/FFA kids in our county. Their 'project' calf had died at a few hours old just a day before. They managed to get their "Ol' Grammy" pet milk cow to, Holy MooCows, except the poor little guy ! Imagine the surprise a year later when all of a sudden that darn Angus bull baby Bloomed and started winning ribbons left and right all the way to state and ? regional ? competitions. He was as a huge, shinny, coal black, laid back, people loving hunk and made Lots of REALLY nice babies for many a farm/ranch until he was 'retired' at . . .18 if memory serves.
Enjoy your videos. Also, thanks for going the extra mile with the extra calves. I had the pleasure to raise 1 heffer that got seperated from momma during a storm, just after birth. We raised her up, and she the best looking cow on our lot. She's friendly, and I still pet her, after all she was my calf. I can work her in the pen, and all she does is lick my arm. 14 years old now, and never let us down. I'll make her my trainer cow next year. She will teach all the weaners how to act. Has done this for us in the past, and most of the calves were very docile, and friendly
Our protocol with twins is to take mother and twins into the yards. Put mother in the crush (squeeze chute) and allow the calves to simultaneously suckle. This seems to draw a very different response by her. We also put a twinning collar on both calves. Then we keep them in the yards for 2-3 weeks with a round bale of cereal hay. She's not walking off her condition and getting plenty of feed to feed her calves. Plus she bonds with both calves. The critical part is ensuring her two calves don't drag her down so much she won't get back in calf when you put her back with the bull.
A lot of farmers in our area keep a dairy cow around. She gets bred every year to the heifer bull and provides milk for the family. They usually pick an older dairy cow with strong maternal instincts who will "adopt" any calf you give her. She usually raises the 2 or 3 extra calves that would have been on a bottle. It's a win-win
Well the cows my husband and I care for are not ours. When there are twins 90% of the time the mom abandones one and I end up raising it on the bottle.last year I ended up with 4 calves I bottle feed. None where twins but sick or half frozen calves from being in a nasty storm. And yes they are mine from the time they end up on my kitchen floor.
Well sounds like the cows kind of made the decisions for you in that case! I love hearing stories about the lengths people go to to take care of their animals, let’s me know I’m in good company! Thanks Linsey
I would bottle feed, It’s so cute, my heart is too big,, Well can’t say that anymore,only 30 percent is working, At 85 l had a Defibrillator in ,so l could take care of my cat TKI, TKI, it has given me 4 years longer to take care of her, l am blessed, You are blessed,
You are 100% correct my friend. Around here in my area, people sell their extra calves for very good money. Someone is always looking for a calf either to raise on there own or to adopt on a cow that lost her calf. Great job.
Like your channel and info. I have 13 bottle calves right now, yes it is a chore & a half, but I am still learning about all of this stuff. I have a lot of experience with poultry, goats, sheep, and pigs. Your videos are giving me more knowledge on the issues with cattle.
Great video Tyler! We had two sets of twins this past calving season. One set didn't make it so I grafted a bottle calf that we got from another farm on to her. It took about 6 days in the pen but she finally took to her. The other set was born small but healthy. I monitored them closely the day they were born and she ended up trying to abandon one of them. So I put all 3 of them in the pen together for about 4 days and she raised them all the way through weaning. Persistence is key!
Thank you Herd One Livestock Management! Grafting can be tough but like you said, persistence pays off! One year I had one I was trying to graft for about three weeks and she still wouldn’t accept it! I finally just gave up and turned them out and the next morning guess what? There they were, nursing! You just got to be more stubborn than the cow!! Thanks for watching
We are half way done calving and three sets of twins. Each set has been brought in and put together for a week. We now have three cows with six calves on the same feed floor and they may not always nurse the right cow, but they nurse a cow.
Good job explaining twins Tyler. I’ve had 3 sets twins so far, I’ve only had to bottle feed one so far. That one is going to a girl for a 4h project here shortly. I guess I look at twins as a bonus, yeah more work but also another calf to sell. Bottle calves are bringing $400 in my area
Thank you Kmsfarms. Bottle calves ought to make great 4h projects being so friendly and used to being handled. $400 wow that’s really good! Thanks for watching
Hey again. I was thinking of another option, I would pen the 3 and also teach both to use the bottle if mum allows and is not trying to mow me down, should help her cope and make sure both are getting decent feed. Also, I have just done 2, I fed them once a day but a thicker mix and they had no drama nibbling on pellets, oat hay and some chaff, I have decided to feed mil for another month, so they will be 3 months, they are smashing plenty of pellet, some bread, some green, different hays and also let them onto pasture for a few hrs each day since week old, they know to come back :) I do not use bottle but, rather a hung drinker with teat, you can add many together, if I am doing one later this year, I will go get another 6 or so, if your gonna do it, prob better in multiples, they do the drinking ok by themselves and if there is a divider in the feeder, I know they are getting enough.....well, that is how my non farmer brain works :)
Did you have two sets of twins this year? Guess so. I don’t raise cows but I like how you laid out the options. I watch Sonne Farms in SD and they do all the living options depending on the circumstances.
I know this is an old video but we have always had great luck an hour twins mom's has always been fine...I currently have a 6 year old who has had 3 sets of twins lol lost one at birth last year but she has also been fine raising both...I do give her as much grain as I can...
Good video man, always informative, we usually pull one of the 2, BUT this last year I had 2 sets of twins, the first set I left together and watched close, the Mother was a big healthy cow with a good udder so I wanted to see how it played out, each one of the twins learned haw to steal lol so they both grew good and the mother didn't get all worn down. the second set was from a big older cow, I locked them all up together and let them nurse but would also take a bottle out and feed one to help out the calves and the cow. Like Diamond Heart said, around here during calving season you can get anywhere from $200-500 for a baby calf as a spiker calf, I gives you options anyway. Have good deay.
I use to buy Devon calves fro my uncle large dairy Farmer and local other Farmers had vet casterat them sometimes got to be a real pain in my __ loved it though my real dram was to become a dairy Farmer didn't make it but have good memories of dads farm best of luck to you that was an awesome field of hay thanks
I’ve got one cow that will take other calves from there mom. She will let all the calves nurse. If we have twins it depends on the situation. Have a good one
Have done bottle baby but only because mom rejected one. Like you said much easier if mom takes both & can handle both. You have a great looking herd! Really enjoy your videos.
Thank you so much Tony! Yeah I kind of go to the bottle as a last resort or if I know a cow is a really light milker. I’m glad you’re enjoying the channel! Thanks for watching
Lots of good information there Tyler! I agree with your point of having two smaller calves vs one big one. Congratulations on blowing past 1000 subscribers brother! That's awesome!
Thank you Chris! Yeah it’s really cool to make it to 1000. I really didn’t know if I ever would. I’m hoping with the (small I’m sure) revenue I can start to do some cool projects and get some cool tools I been wanting. I don’t know we’ll see! Thanks again and I haven’t forgot all your shoutouts and promotion you gave me that helped me get here, I really appreciate it!!
We started calving just last year and the last cow to calve was the one with twins. I don't know, things just went well, the thought of pulling one never came to us. She is a Hereford cow and just raised them both without any problems (knock on wood). We tried AI last year and she didn't take, so this year we've got a bull in with the cows. Hopefully she'll take this year and I'm interested to see if she has twins again, which I heard can happen with some cows.
I'm greedy, I would raise one on the bottle. Back in the 90's calves were cheap. A friend went to the sale and bought a couple baby calves to raise on the bottle. ( dont know why) He put them in his trailer and parked in the large parking area. He stayed and watched the grown cattle sell for awhile and then drove home. When he went to unload the calves he had five. Someone was just wanting to get rid of calves. lol Another friend left the auction one night and the next morning discovered someone had put a few puppies in his stock trailer. For anyone new to the cattle bitness you just might want to purchase a good lock for your trailer!
Things sure are different down across the border, we just bought a little calf for $375 at action last week, what we do when we have twins or triplets is pull the cow and all calves up to the barn and put them in a small pen until we need the extra calf for one that lost her calf, ive had cows that lost their calf and we put them in a small pan with the dead one until I get back from wherever I can find a calf, I skin the dead one and cover the new one with the hide (tie it on) and put the cow in the calving pen head gate to get the new calf sucking and when he is going to town after it open the head gate so she can back out and smell the hide covered calf, leave them together for the day and then come in and get the calf up work him over so he makes noise and momma is concerned then pull the hide after he starts sucking and they will be able to go out in a few days, we always need extra calves every year so twins are a big blessing
Things aren’t so different down here. I’ve done what you’ve described except I never have skinned the dead one I’ve always been able to get the same results after two or so days of forced nursing. Once her milk is going through the adopted calf’s system it will have the right scent. At least that’s what I was told. But I agree with you, twins are a good thing!
Farmer Tyler Ranch i skin it and then it works every time even if the calf that died is a little older, and I don’t have to mess with it longer than the one day, but when you run as many as we do you get good at skinning and adopting lol but if you have time to force it you are right they will mostly take it too.
Farmer Tyler Ranch I know people that swear by baby powder on both the dead calf and the cows nose and then on the new calf and do the switch but I have never tried it that way lol
Thank you so much Alan! I can’t believe it happened! It is thanks in big part to people like you who support the channel and comment on videos consistently. So thank you for your support! Wouldn’t be here without you!
that is how it is around here and 8 hours west of me, in the dairy industry, if the farmer dont need any new cows, they cross bread there Holsteins with black Angus, or some beef bread in hopes the marked changes, but it has not since 2005, and the calves are worth nothing, locally i pick them up from the farmer for free to $50 in fact i just got 2 weeks ago two Angus cross heifers and a bull for next to nothing, if you seen my videos, i have never used a bottle in 48 years. when the market is low an they need calves for new cows the bull out west get like you said bang.. i make the 8 hour drive and pick them all up, for 48 years i dont sell any beef, it is all for families in need, as well as turkeys, chicken, garden. i went thought very hard times when i broke my back at work in 1987 for years well i fight with wsib in court, now i find my self in that same place after our courts gave my cheating gold digging ex wife everything i had and then sum.. if one of my new heifer has twins i pull one off know mater what, being i never use a bottle, it only takes me 1 to 3 times showing it how to drink on its own, it no big deal for me, if an older cow has twins i lock them up, if an older cow has 1 and has lots of milk i put 2 to 4 calves on her, i do have some holstens cross that give loads of milk
Tyler have bottle feed and left them on the cow or put one onto another cow to raise just do what you have to do shooting a calf is like giving away or losing money.
If opposite sexed I Always sell the heifer. I've never had one breed back. I castrate the bull calf because that's a genetic I don't want to pass down in a herd. But I'm with you on the rest of it. Great video.
Thanks John. I’m really sorry about the volume, a few others have mentioned it too and I can’t figure out the problem. Everything sounds good on my end. Is it the whole video that’s too quiet or just clips? Thanks
Tyler, we had two milk cows. One for our house milk. I got to do the milking. The other cow was for orphans and twins. She would take any calf. One time I saw her nursing 4 calves at once. All tails we're twitching. Since she was mostly Brown Swiss she gave lots of milk. She had horns an a crabby disposition. If you wanted to milk her she had to be tied up and her hind legs hobbled. She would kick you and your milk bucket and try to hook you with those deadly horns. We kept her because of her nursing talent. I was ready to shoot her the first time she kicked me. I was 10 years old at the time.
Mike I really like your stories. I can picture the four tails twitchin and that ol brown Swiss just standing there smiling! I was told once, never work cows with your pistol within reach! Haha!
I noticed that when a cow is going to have twins they will have 2 water bags.one will be smaller.i give a cow with twins dairy nuts every day to help them rare the 2.good looking channel
Hmm I never noticed two water bags before but then again i mostly leave them alone while they’re in labor until I feel they need assistance, if it gets to that point. Thank you King 37! And what are Dairy nuts??
@@farmertylerranch4399 dairy nuts are feed that you give cows to milk more.they use them for milking cows here.i suppose you call them another name there.maybe ration or meal.from Ireland
This year had a first time heifer give birth to twins. What I did is got both twins sucking from a bottle and left the twins on her. Once a day I'll make a big bottle of milk replacer and let the calves or twins have the bottle they are still on Mama they're doing good and the bottle seems to just give them a little or her a little help. So they got Mama's milk as little of milk replacer and it seems to be working great no issues with them and it's been about 4 weeks and there stomach is always full
Couldn’t agree more Jon. And really it’s not that much extra work, especially if you make a bottle rack or bucket train them. The hardest part is standing there for 5 minutes while they head butt you! Thanks Jon!
I might have a weird opinion here. But id think a guy would want to save every calf. Like you said two is better than one. But I also realise some guys don't have the time to raise a bottle calf. Your cows sure are looking good, content and happy.
Thank you Kory and I don’t think that’s a weird opinion in fact I totally agree. Really once you get used to feeding the bottles it’s not so bad, definitely worth the effort to save the calf I say. Hey Kory you’re in Nebraska right? Are you in danger of flooding?
@@farmertylerranch4399 yea I live in southwest nebraska. Were pretty safe here. We got the wind and rain. But we didn't get the snow like the panhandle did. Or the flooding like northeastern Nebraska did. The coop I work for lost like 5 tarps on corn piles and part of a roof on a pole barn full of wheat. We got lucky. We don't have anything like eastern Nebraska does.
I grew up on a beef farm. If a cow has a breech calf, ALWAYS reach in to look for a second calf. 50% of the time if you have a breech calf, there is a good chance there is second calf.
A guild line i go by if I ever have twins lol is pull one off so one calf grows good and bottle feed the other because one on the bottle will grows as good as 2 on one mother plus less stress on momma
I like that strategy and it makes good sense. I still can’t believe you’ve never had a set of twins! Maybe your new herd (that I know you’re going to get) will have the twin gene. Thanks Blake!
Hey triplet gene would make you famous I think! 1000 subs I know how crazy! I really can’t believe it! It’s because I put my wife in the thumbnail picture I think! Thanks Blake!
Thanks BTO I think you picked a good topic! Glad you enjoyed it. So you ready for twins now?? You never know when they will happen. Boy you said it on the day job, why can’t I just get rich farming, ranching, and making RUclips videos? Haha maybe one day. Thanks for watching and for your input. I may call on you again for your opinion!
@@farmertylerranch4399 i should ask you this ... I've got a cow ,raised from bottle, 3rd calf this year , last year she had a still born calf we had to pull, huge bull calf , this year she had a small bull calf , i thot she might of looked big enuff for twins ... she gave birth without assistance ... should i had check her for twins, i didn't, would she still be alive if she did have a calf and it was still inside her ?
I wouldn’t worry if she had another one in there you’d know it for sure. They will keep pushing until everything is out. I’ve thought the same thing before, man she’s big enough to have triplets! And then no it’s just a little calf. So you can’t really tell just from their size, at least I can’t. To answer your question yes if a calf gets stuck in there it will kill her in 3-4 weeks I’d say but she’ll get feverish and sickly long before that. And usually the dead calf’s hoof will poke out after a few days. So long story short, if she’s acting normal, and cleaned out all afterbirth, I wouldn’t worry about her one bit
@@farmertylerranch4399 thank you very much, yep she seems to be normal bn well a month yesterday, the poor girl has lumpy jaw now for a couple years, still eating and maintaining her weight, but i think it's her time to go at weaning of the calf 😫
No problem BTO. Yeah if it’s been a month she’ll be fine. I’ve had a few get lump jaw and it’s always just gone away after a month or two. That’s weird it has lasted so long. But hey if her body condition is good and she raises her calf I’d consider keeping her another year, why not? She’s doing her job ok it sounds like.
Damn man you really do know your stuff. We usually take the smaller one or the sterile heifer off. Good video Tyler p.s. Have the wife feed the bottle calves for you. Take care good video Tyler.
Thanks Tom! Yeah she feeds him a bottle in the morning. If she wasn’t also nursing our baby I might make her feed in the evening too haha. Actually she’d probably want to. Pulling the heifers off is a good idea then you don’t accidentally keep one. Thanks again Tom!
Yes I knew that, probably should have touched on that in the video. Damnit! Oh well seems most people know it. The way it was explained to me was that in utero, the bull leaches hormones that mess up her reproductive organs development. There is a slight (maybe 10%) chance she will develop normally but most likely no, unless of course you have twin females then they will breed like normal. Jeez I could sit and talk cows all day! Thanks Tom! How many calves today?
Your kicking ass Tyler. The bull calf takes the hormones away from the heifer. Pretty much making her sterile yes. I could talk cattle all day too. we have a total of 20 calves. 22 hfrs in. And how are yours doing?
So far so good. No new ones in the last two days but it just started raining and I saw a few new bags yesterday so I’m thinking it’s going to pick back up this evening or tomorrow. They just love to calve in the rain for some reason. My theory is it goes back to some survival instinct where maybe predators are less active in the rain or something? I don’t know why I just know that they do it!
I watched on a show that's located in Alaska, the cow had twins and it broke my heart to see them shoot it They claimed the one they shot was sexless, they gave it to another that had dogs for dog food. Thing about this was the original owner let the cow get grown to harvest it's coat. I don't understand these things😕
How could you ever shoot one of those little guys. You have a bunch of little ones on the farm congrats! Fun time of year growing the herd #WorldsOkayestFarmer
I don'thave cattle but I would bottle feed a heifer calf over a bull calf because she would be more gentle when put into the breeding program. Let the bull calf or the bigger heifer calf stay with the mom for fall feeder market.
If you have a heifer/bull pair of twins (rather than a same-gender set), the heifer's no good in a breeding program. She's what's known as a "free marten" and sterile. So should be put into a feeder program, rather than a breeding program.
My grandpa told me how if he had a good heavy milker that only gave birth to one but could handle 2 or maybe 3 once but if he didn’t have any to pull off other calves he would buy bottle calves at the sales barn to put on and raise it as a steer.
Farmer Tyler Ranch Yes he is a great mentor him, my dad and two older brothers! My dad has a full time job and my older brothers are off the farm now one in school and my oldest is a concrete Forman, and is going to be buying a farm soon. So most of the time it’s just me and my poppa getting the work done we sold the cattle in 2015 but we’re planning on getting them back in about 2-3 ish years when I’m done high school. And my poppa is the one showing me the ropes and what not. Anyways thanks for your time replying to my comment!
Too add to my question. Does this only happen i cattle? I have never seen or heard of this in other rumanants like goats deer elk or sheep. Is it a genetic issue in domestic cattle?
Having “Freemartin Twins” is the normal outcome for cattle that have mixed sex twins, as in there’s a 90% chance it will happen. However this phenomenon has also been recorded in sheep, goats, and even pigs, although it is far more rare in these animals as they commonly give birth to twins, unlike cattle. The reason this happens is not genetic in a sense, it is because when cattle carry twins there is typically fusion in the blood vessels in the chorion, which is a fancy way of saying the twins share a blood supply from the placenta. This causes her reproductive organs to not develop properly and usually leads to her displaying more masculine traits. It doesn’t really work both ways though, the male twin is basically unchanged. I hope that answers your question! Thanks Tammy
This is an interesting point, but look at the cow she has 4 teats, which tells you she has 4 quarters, so why take one of. I'll explain most of you guys there are raising cattle on a systems much like here in the UK, my dad was a stockman on a beef suckler farm for over 50 years, they used too rear calves brought from auction just like some of you do each cow would be stalled and have 4 calves too rear upto 8 weeks they went out to pasture this was the cows the calves were housed until 6 months old then go out on pasture the rearing of 4 calves per cow did not put anymore strain on the cow as you can supplement her feed ad he used to, a mix of rolled oats, and brood cow nuts he reared thousands of calves this way and never lost a cow or calf O
Wow! I'm glad humans aren't wired the same as cattle! I'd have abandoned the smarter one of my twins! You'd never know to look at her today that she started out at only 4lbs 11oz. LMAO
Here we like to let the cows feed twines if that does not work we will feed it or if a cow loses a calf we will try and graft it onto her. We have some Angus/Holstein cows and we have 12 pure Angus cows we find the pure breed calves end up sucking on the cross breed cows for more milk!!
Remember a few videos back, you were loading all the dogs in the truck, I just said to my wife, I wonder how long until Tyler has to help that calf in and out of the truck along with the dogs! Lol
Interesting cows have 1 udder gland and 4 tits and goats and sheep have 2 udders glands and 2 tits - cows have 1-2 calfs and sheep and goats have 1-5 kids/lambs - nature is a funny thing
I watched some sell on line and they have brought from $200 - $535 per calf which seems a little high. You can get them for less but the quality isn't there.
Win, Win, Win ! ! !
Like my neighbor always said, 'practicality, patience, & persistence balanced by a learned and practiced eye' make all the difference.
Quite a while ago(45+yrs) we were told the story of a well known, local Champion bull. Seems that a family breeding and raising purebreds had a twin problem. After discussing their workload and making some calls they donated one twin, a 6 day old, undersized, sickly bull calf to a couple of 4H/FFA kids in our county. Their 'project' calf had died at a few hours old just a day before.
They managed to get their "Ol' Grammy" pet milk cow to, Holy MooCows, except the poor little guy !
Imagine the surprise a year later when all of a sudden that darn Angus bull baby Bloomed and started winning ribbons left and right all the way to state and ? regional ? competitions.
He was as a huge, shinny, coal black, laid back, people loving hunk and made Lots of REALLY nice babies for many a farm/ranch until he was 'retired' at . . .18 if memory serves.
Great story!😁👍
Enjoy your videos. Also, thanks for going the extra mile with the extra calves. I had the pleasure to raise 1 heffer that got seperated from momma during a storm, just after birth. We raised her up, and she the best looking cow on our lot. She's friendly, and I still pet her, after all she was my calf. I can work her in the pen, and all she does is lick my arm. 14 years old now, and never let us down. I'll make her my trainer cow next year. She will teach all the weaners how to act. Has done this for us in the past, and most of the calves were very docile, and friendly
Our protocol with twins is to take mother and twins into the yards. Put mother in the crush (squeeze chute) and allow the calves to simultaneously suckle. This seems to draw a very different response by her. We also put a twinning collar on both calves. Then we keep them in the yards for 2-3 weeks with a round bale of cereal hay. She's not walking off her condition and getting plenty of feed to feed her calves. Plus she bonds with both calves. The critical part is ensuring her two calves don't drag her down so much she won't get back in calf when you put her back with the bull.
Momma cow licking one calf and the other nursing. How precious ❤️ is that!
That’s a good Momma! Thanks
A lot of farmers in our area keep a dairy cow around. She gets bred every year to the heifer bull and provides milk for the family. They usually pick an older dairy cow with strong maternal instincts who will "adopt" any calf you give her. She usually raises the 2 or 3 extra calves that would have been on a bottle. It's a win-win
@@brianjonker510 I'm in Texas
Your outlook on twins is bang on what i would go with!
Well the cows my husband and I care for are not ours. When there are twins 90% of the time the mom abandones one and I end up raising it on the bottle.last year I ended up with 4 calves I bottle feed. None where twins but sick or half frozen calves from being in a nasty storm. And yes they are mine from the time they end up on my kitchen floor.
Well sounds like the cows kind of made the decisions for you in that case! I love hearing stories about the lengths people go to to take care of their animals, let’s me know I’m in good company! Thanks Linsey
I would bottle feed, It’s so cute, my heart is too big,, Well can’t say that anymore,only 30 percent is working, At 85 l had a Defibrillator in ,so l could take care of my cat TKI, TKI, it has given me 4 years longer to take care of her, l am blessed, You are blessed,
You are 100% correct my friend. Around here in my area, people sell their extra calves for very good money. Someone is always looking for a calf either to raise on there own or to adopt on a cow that lost her calf. Great job.
Thank you DHR! Just curious what do drop calves bring in your area? Thanks again!
$400 - $500 for beef calves. $150 - $250 for dairy calves
Wow I had no idea they’d be that high! Maybe I should just sell them! Thanks DHR!
@@DiamondHeartRanch Depends on where you are. Here $200-$400 for beef, $40- $125 for dairy here.
aCycloneSteve - very true, I was talking for the ND area.
Like your channel and info. I have 13 bottle calves right now, yes it is a chore & a half, but I am still learning about all of this stuff. I have a lot of experience with poultry, goats, sheep, and pigs. Your videos are giving me more knowledge on the issues with cattle.
Thanks a lot Chris, I’m glad you’ve found the videos informative. Wow 13 bottle calves that’s some work right there!! Thank you for watching
Great video Tyler! We had two sets of twins this past calving season. One set didn't make it so I grafted a bottle calf that we got from another farm on to her. It took about 6 days in the pen but she finally took to her. The other set was born small but healthy. I monitored them closely the day they were born and she ended up trying to abandon one of them. So I put all 3 of them in the pen together for about 4 days and she raised them all the way through weaning. Persistence is key!
Thank you Herd One Livestock Management! Grafting can be tough but like you said, persistence pays off! One year I had one I was trying to graft for about three weeks and she still wouldn’t accept it! I finally just gave up and turned them out and the next morning guess what? There they were, nursing! You just got to be more stubborn than the cow!! Thanks for watching
Awesome video. Excellent commendatory. God bless you & your family for taking so much care of those cows & their calves. Thank you for sharing.
We are half way done calving and three sets of twins. Each set has been brought in and put together for a week. We now have three cows with six calves on the same feed floor and they may not always nurse the right cow, but they nurse a cow.
Put separately with the calves before we started to add the pairs together
Good job explaining twins Tyler. I’ve had 3 sets twins so far, I’ve only had to bottle feed one so far. That one is going to a girl for a 4h project here shortly. I guess I look at twins as a bonus, yeah more work but also another calf to sell. Bottle calves are bringing $400 in my area
Thank you Kmsfarms. Bottle calves ought to make great 4h projects being so friendly and used to being handled. $400 wow that’s really good! Thanks for watching
Hey again. I was thinking of another option, I would pen the 3 and also teach both to use the bottle if mum allows and is not trying to mow me down, should help her cope and make sure both are getting decent feed. Also, I have just done 2, I fed them once a day but a thicker mix and they had no drama nibbling on pellets, oat hay and some chaff, I have decided to feed mil for another month, so they will be 3 months, they are smashing plenty of pellet, some bread, some green, different hays and also let them onto pasture for a few hrs each day since week old, they know to come back :) I do not use bottle but, rather a hung drinker with teat, you can add many together, if I am doing one later this year, I will go get another 6 or so, if your gonna do it, prob better in multiples, they do the drinking ok by themselves and if there is a divider in the feeder, I know they are getting enough.....well, that is how my non farmer brain works :)
Sounds like you got a good program going there. If you’re going to feed one may as well feed a few! Thanks for watching
Did you have two sets of twins this year? Guess so.
I don’t raise cows but I like how you laid out the options. I watch Sonne Farms in SD and they do all the living options depending on the circumstances.
I know this is an old video but we have always had great luck an hour twins mom's has always been fine...I currently have a 6 year old who has had 3 sets of twins lol lost one at birth last year but she has also been fine raising both...I do give her as much grain as I can...
Good video man, always informative, we usually pull one of the 2, BUT this last year I had 2 sets of twins, the first set I left together and watched close, the Mother was a big healthy cow with a good udder so I wanted to see how it played out, each one of the twins learned haw to steal lol so they both grew good and the mother didn't get all worn down. the second set was from a big older cow, I locked them all up together and let them nurse but would also take a bottle out and feed one to help out the calves and the cow. Like Diamond Heart said, around here during calving season you can get anywhere from $200-500 for a baby calf as a spiker calf, I gives you options anyway. Have good deay.
Thank you RRAR. Sounds like you handle things a lot like me. Still can’t believe drop calves bring so much! Thanks for watching
Putting one of the twins down is always an option but I never could do that. It was good to see you couldn't as well. Thanks for the come a long.
Sure glad you changed your music. I like your pickin. Very interesting video and probably instructional for people who want to raise cattle.
I use to buy Devon calves fro my uncle large dairy Farmer and local other Farmers had vet casterat them sometimes got to be a real pain in my __ loved it though my real dram was to become a dairy Farmer didn't make it but have good memories of dads farm best of luck to you that was an awesome field of hay thanks
Thank you for the wonderful information about why a mother might reject a calf twin.
I’ve got one cow that will take other calves from there mom. She will let all the calves nurse. If we have twins it depends on the situation. Have a good one
That’s a good cow to keep around! I need one of those haha! Same with me every situation is different. Thanks jacky
Gerrald Farms
Priceless!
You doing a great job and your video always very great 👍
Have done bottle baby but only because mom rejected one. Like you said much easier if mom takes both & can handle both. You have a great looking herd! Really enjoy your videos.
Thank you so much Tony! Yeah I kind of go to the bottle as a last resort or if I know a cow is a really light milker. I’m glad you’re enjoying the channel! Thanks for watching
Keep doing what you're doing I think you are doing good
Lots of good information there Tyler! I agree with your point of having two smaller calves vs one big one. Congratulations on blowing past 1000 subscribers brother! That's awesome!
Thank you Chris! Yeah it’s really cool to make it to 1000. I really didn’t know if I ever would. I’m hoping with the (small I’m sure) revenue I can start to do some cool projects and get some cool tools I been wanting. I don’t know we’ll see! Thanks again and I haven’t forgot all your shoutouts and promotion you gave me that helped me get here, I really appreciate it!!
We started calving just last year and the last cow to calve was the one with twins. I don't know, things just went well, the thought of pulling one never came to us. She is a Hereford cow and just raised them both without any problems (knock on wood). We tried AI last year and she didn't take, so this year we've got a bull in with the cows. Hopefully she'll take this year and I'm interested to see if she has twins again, which I heard can happen with some cows.
I would just bottle feed one. Like u said 2 is better than 1. Loving the videos keep them coming😁
Thank you Nathaniel! I’m glad you’ve been enjoying them. Thanks for watching!
Bottle feed one love doing it. And it's great for the kids to show them responsiblty.
Yeah when my daughter gets older this will be her job for sure! Thanks Mike
Great job with the content. I really enjoy the channel...
Thank you FRF! I’m glad you’re enjoying it. Thank you for your support!
I'm greedy, I would raise one on the bottle. Back in the 90's calves were cheap. A friend went to the sale and bought a couple baby calves to raise on the bottle. ( dont know why) He put them in his trailer and parked in the large parking area. He stayed and watched the grown cattle sell for awhile and then drove home. When he went to unload the calves he had five. Someone was just wanting to get rid of calves. lol
Another friend left the auction one night and the next morning discovered someone had put a few puppies in his stock trailer.
For anyone new to the cattle bitness you just might want to purchase a good lock for your trailer!
Wow that’s crazy! I might go park at the sale yard just to see what I might get!!
Things sure are different down across the border, we just bought a little calf for $375 at action last week, what we do when we have twins or triplets is pull the cow and all calves up to the barn and put them in a small pen until we need the extra calf for one that lost her calf, ive had cows that lost their calf and we put them in a small pan with the dead one until I get back from wherever I can find a calf, I skin the dead one and cover the new one with the hide (tie it on) and put the cow in the calving pen head gate to get the new calf sucking and when he is going to town after it open the head gate so she can back out and smell the hide covered calf, leave them together for the day and then come in and get the calf up work him over so he makes noise and momma is concerned then pull the hide after he starts sucking and they will be able to go out in a few days, we always need extra calves every year so twins are a big blessing
Things aren’t so different down here. I’ve done what you’ve described except I never have skinned the dead one I’ve always been able to get the same results after two or so days of forced nursing. Once her milk is going through the adopted calf’s system it will have the right scent. At least that’s what I was told. But I agree with you, twins are a good thing!
Farmer Tyler Ranch i skin it and then it works every time even if the calf that died is a little older, and I don’t have to mess with it longer than the one day, but when you run as many as we do you get good at skinning and adopting lol but if you have time to force it you are right they will mostly take it too.
Farmer Tyler Ranch I know people that swear by baby powder on both the dead calf and the cows nose and then on the new calf and do the switch but I have never tried it that way lol
Hmm I don’t think I’ve heard that one before. Thanks Henry!
Farmer Tyler Ranch I’ve never tried it cause skinning works so good but I know a few people that say it works
Congrats on 1k also you can start making some extra cash now! Really helps out around the farm!
Thank you! Yeah im really excited about hitting that milestone. That revenue will help with some projects around here for sure! Thanks again!
Really enjoying the videos. Sure your channel will take off soon Congrats on 1k subs.
Thank you so much Gaines Arnold! I’m glad you like the videos, can’t believe I hit 1000! Take care
Tyler, congrats on 1K subs. You rock man!
Thank you so much Alan! I can’t believe it happened! It is thanks in big part to people like you who support the channel and comment on videos consistently. So thank you for your support! Wouldn’t be here without you!
@@farmertylerranch4399 Keep those Farmer Tyler Ranch videos coming our way!
4H - There are usually 4H kids looking for "bucket calves" to raise as a project.
Yes you’re right. I kind of forgot about that! Thanks DoubleDogDare54
that is how it is around here and 8 hours west of me, in the dairy industry, if the farmer dont need any new cows, they cross bread there Holsteins with black Angus, or some beef bread in hopes the marked changes, but it has not since 2005, and the calves are worth nothing, locally i pick them up from the farmer for free to $50 in fact i just got 2 weeks ago two Angus cross heifers and a bull for next to nothing, if you seen my videos, i have never used a bottle in 48 years. when the market is low an they need calves for new cows the bull out west get like you said bang.. i make the 8 hour drive and pick them all up, for 48 years i dont sell any beef, it is all for families in need, as well as turkeys, chicken, garden. i went thought very hard times when i broke my back at work in 1987 for years well i fight with wsib in court, now i find my self in that same place after our courts gave my cheating gold digging ex wife everything i had and then sum.. if one of my new heifer has twins i pull one off know mater what, being i never use a bottle, it only takes me 1 to 3 times showing it how to drink on its own, it no big deal for me, if an older cow has twins i lock them up, if an older cow has 1 and has lots of milk i put 2 to 4 calves on her, i do have some holstens cross that give loads of milk
Sounds like you got a good program going there!
Here in Kentucky we have to pay 100.00 150.00 for Angus X Holstein bottle calves especially if their all black
Tyler have bottle feed and left them on the cow or put one onto another cow to raise just do what you have to do shooting a calf is like giving away or losing money.
You’re like me, do what the situation calls for. I agree I would never shoot one either. I couldn’t believe when someone told me that! Thanks Roger
@@farmertylerranch4399 Yeah me either when you said something about it Tyler.
in my opinoin its the mamma cows job ta take care fer the calves not mine,, thank ya fer the video
If opposite sexed I Always sell the heifer. I've never had one breed back. I castrate the bull calf because that's a genetic I don't want to pass down in a herd. But I'm with you on the rest of it. Great video.
I probably should have talked a bit about freemartins and why they won’t breed. Thanks Keith!
@@farmertylerranch4399 yes a lot of people dont know that .
congrats on 1000, really enjoying the videos, I have a problem at times with your volume being so low but keep up the good work
Thanks John. I’m really sorry about the volume, a few others have mentioned it too and I can’t figure out the problem. Everything sounds good on my end. Is it the whole video that’s too quiet or just clips? Thanks
Tyler, we had two milk cows. One for our house milk. I got to do the milking. The other cow was for orphans and twins. She would take any calf. One time I saw her nursing 4 calves at once. All tails we're twitching. Since she was mostly Brown Swiss she gave lots of milk. She had horns an a crabby disposition. If you wanted to milk her she had to be tied up and her hind legs hobbled. She would kick you and your milk bucket and try to hook you with those deadly horns. We kept her because of her nursing talent. I was ready to shoot her the first time she kicked me. I was 10 years old at the time.
Mike I really like your stories. I can picture the four tails twitchin and that ol brown Swiss just standing there smiling! I was told once, never work cows with your pistol within reach! Haha!
I guess she just wanted to be a Mum
I noticed that when a cow is going to have twins they will have 2 water bags.one will be smaller.i give a cow with twins dairy nuts every day to help them rare the 2.good looking channel
Hmm I never noticed two water bags before but then again i mostly leave them alone while they’re in labor until I feel they need assistance, if it gets to that point. Thank you King 37! And what are Dairy nuts??
@@farmertylerranch4399 dairy nuts are feed that you give cows to milk more.they use them for milking cows here.i suppose you call them another name there.maybe ration or meal.from Ireland
Great video and information! 💕
Thanks Cheryl I’m glad you liked it!
where are you located...with such beautiful green grass ?
This year had a first time heifer give birth to twins. What I did is got both twins sucking from a bottle and left the twins on her. Once a day I'll make a big bottle of milk replacer and let the calves or twins have the bottle they are still on Mama they're doing good and the bottle seems to just give them a little or her a little help. So they got Mama's milk as little of milk replacer and it seems to be working great no issues with them and it's been about 4 weeks and there stomach is always full
Very knowledgeable on this topic
Thank you Estelle experience and listening to old cowboys has been a great teacher! Thanks for watching!
Hey congrats on 1000 buddy
Thank you very much Tom! Can’t believe it
Well that opinion shows that there's some stupid people out there. You are given that extra calf so put in the extra work and make some money!
Couldn’t agree more Jon. And really it’s not that much extra work, especially if you make a bottle rack or bucket train them. The hardest part is standing there for 5 minutes while they head butt you! Thanks Jon!
@@farmertylerranch4399 lol. Head butts. They get so excited!
❤great advice
I like your videos. Thanks. Personally I raise a calf or two per year. I’d love to find someone locally who would sell me a twin!
Thank you Jen!
I might have a weird opinion here. But id think a guy would want to save every calf. Like you said two is better than one. But I also realise some guys don't have the time to raise a bottle calf. Your cows sure are looking good, content and happy.
Thank you Kory and I don’t think that’s a weird opinion in fact I totally agree. Really once you get used to feeding the bottles it’s not so bad, definitely worth the effort to save the calf I say. Hey Kory you’re in Nebraska right? Are you in danger of flooding?
@@farmertylerranch4399 yea I live in southwest nebraska. Were pretty safe here. We got the wind and rain. But we didn't get the snow like the panhandle did. Or the flooding like northeastern Nebraska did. The coop I work for lost like 5 tarps on corn piles and part of a roof on a pole barn full of wheat. We got lucky. We don't have anything like eastern Nebraska does.
Oh man well I’m glad you were basically unaffected but I sure feel for those poor folks that got it bad.
@@farmertylerranch4399 yea me too it's gonna hurt for a while
Holy hell you're already over a thousand subscribers!
It’s crazy right? I don’t know what happened. It’s because of loyal viewers and commenters like yourself. Thanks Jon!
@@farmertylerranch4399 I thought with that face and then whiskers you got the Chris Hemsworth fan club!
I grew up on a beef farm. If a cow has a breech calf, ALWAYS reach in to look for a second calf. 50% of the time if you have a breech calf, there is a good chance there is second calf.
Good advice! Thanks Kimberly
A guild line i go by if I ever have twins lol is pull one off so one calf grows good and bottle feed the other because one on the bottle will grows as good as 2 on one mother plus less stress on momma
I like that strategy and it makes good sense. I still can’t believe you’ve never had a set of twins! Maybe your new herd (that I know you’re going to get) will have the twin gene. Thanks Blake!
Farmer Tyler Ranch lol my luck would be triplet Gene lol man you are knocking on a 1000 subs!!!! 👍👍🎉🎊
Hey triplet gene would make you famous I think! 1000 subs I know how crazy! I really can’t believe it! It’s because I put my wife in the thumbnail picture I think! Thanks Blake!
Farmer Tyler Ranch haha gotta go with what works lol 👍👍
Always interesting! What’s the calf count now? Half way there yet?
Not half yet last count was 11 cows so still 28 to go. Thanks!
Best option leave both on mother , second option graft on cow that lost hers , third option sell it to neighbour that lost one or wants a pale bunter
Excellent job, spot on info , aaah bottle feeding yes a commitment... but a enjoyable one.... a day job not so much enjoyable commitment , lol 👍
Thanks BTO I think you picked a good topic! Glad you enjoyed it. So you ready for twins now?? You never know when they will happen. Boy you said it on the day job, why can’t I just get rich farming, ranching, and making RUclips videos? Haha maybe one day. Thanks for watching and for your input. I may call on you again for your opinion!
@@farmertylerranch4399 i should ask you this ... I've got a cow ,raised from bottle, 3rd calf this year , last year she had a still born calf we had to pull, huge bull calf , this year she had a small bull calf , i thot she might of looked big enuff for twins ... she gave birth without assistance ... should i had check her for twins, i didn't, would she still be alive if she did have a calf and it was still inside her ?
I wouldn’t worry if she had another one in there you’d know it for sure. They will keep pushing until everything is out. I’ve thought the same thing before, man she’s big enough to have triplets! And then no it’s just a little calf. So you can’t really tell just from their size, at least I can’t. To answer your question yes if a calf gets stuck in there it will kill her in 3-4 weeks I’d say but she’ll get feverish and sickly long before that. And usually the dead calf’s hoof will poke out after a few days. So long story short, if she’s acting normal, and cleaned out all afterbirth, I wouldn’t worry about her one bit
@@farmertylerranch4399 thank you very much, yep she seems to be normal bn well a month yesterday, the poor girl has lumpy jaw now for a couple years, still eating and maintaining her weight, but i think it's her time to go at weaning of the calf 😫
No problem BTO. Yeah if it’s been a month she’ll be fine. I’ve had a few get lump jaw and it’s always just gone away after a month or two. That’s weird it has lasted so long. But hey if her body condition is good and she raises her calf I’d consider keeping her another year, why not? She’s doing her job ok it sounds like.
I always have bottle fed the extra. Never let a calf go to the wayside!!!
Damn man you really do know your stuff. We usually take the smaller one or the sterile heifer off. Good video Tyler p.s. Have the wife feed the bottle calves for you. Take care good video Tyler.
Thanks Tom! Yeah she feeds him a bottle in the morning. If she wasn’t also nursing our baby I might make her feed in the evening too haha. Actually she’d probably want to. Pulling the heifers off is a good idea then you don’t accidentally keep one. Thanks again Tom!
Yeah just if the twins are a B n H I am sure you know that the heifer will be a free martin
Yes I knew that, probably should have touched on that in the video. Damnit! Oh well seems most people know it. The way it was explained to me was that in utero, the bull leaches hormones that mess up her reproductive organs development. There is a slight (maybe 10%) chance she will develop normally but most likely no, unless of course you have twin females then they will breed like normal. Jeez I could sit and talk cows all day! Thanks Tom! How many calves today?
Your kicking ass Tyler. The bull calf takes the hormones away from the heifer. Pretty much making her sterile yes. I could talk cattle all day too. we have a total of 20 calves. 22 hfrs in. And how are yours doing?
So far so good. No new ones in the last two days but it just started raining and I saw a few new bags yesterday so I’m thinking it’s going to pick back up this evening or tomorrow. They just love to calve in the rain for some reason. My theory is it goes back to some survival instinct where maybe predators are less active in the rain or something? I don’t know why I just know that they do it!
I would try to bottle feed one if I had cows 🤷♀️🤣 my kids would be all over this.
Good info! How is your little one and your wife doing? I know it can take a bit to get a routine down lol
Boy you said it! Everyone is doing good and sleep is getting easier so we’re all happy! Thanks a lot DFF!
Boy you said it! Everyone is doing good and sleep is getting easier so we’re all happy! Thanks a lot DFF!
I watched on a show that's located in Alaska, the cow had twins and it broke my heart to see them shoot it They claimed the one they shot was sexless, they gave it to another that had dogs for dog food. Thing about this was the original owner let the cow get grown to harvest it's coat. I don't understand these things😕
This may be a dumb question but can you loosely tie both twins to the mother until she gets used to both calves?
That’s not a dumb question as a matter of fact what people have done is tie the calves together so when one nurses she ha to let both nurse!
How could you ever shoot one of those little guys. You have a bunch of little ones on the farm congrats! Fun time of year growing the herd #WorldsOkayestFarmer
Yeah I wouldn’t have the heart for that unless there was a health issue and it had to be done. It is a fun time of year for sure! Thanks WOF!
Do you give supplemental feedings to the good mama cow who accepts both twins?
No it’s nearly impossible to feed her separately without removing her from the herd altogether. That time of year the grass is pretty good so she’s ok
I don'thave cattle but I would bottle feed a heifer calf over a bull calf because she would be more gentle when put into the breeding program. Let the bull calf or the bigger heifer calf stay with the mom for fall feeder market.
If you have a heifer/bull pair of twins (rather than a same-gender set), the heifer's no good in a breeding program. She's what's known as a "free marten" and sterile. So should be put into a feeder program, rather than a breeding program.
Your logic is sound but Niccolai is correct, the heifer from a mixed set of twins is unfortunately sterile 90% of the time. Thanks T. Riddle!
I always raise a second calve for veal.
We usually leave both calfs on one of our cows had twins the last 3 years
Yeah if the cows will do it I think that’s the way to go. Wow twins 3 years in a row! Thanks Null 1!
@@farmertylerranch4399 she's paying her way
My grandpa told me how if he had a good heavy milker that only gave birth to one but could handle 2 or maybe 3 once but if he didn’t have any to pull off other calves he would buy bottle calves at the sales barn to put on and raise it as a steer.
Some cows can definitely feed two some can barely feed one! Sounds like your grandpa knew what he was doing! Thanks Preston!
Farmer Tyler Ranch Yes he is a great mentor him, my dad and two older brothers! My dad has a full time job and my older brothers are off the farm now one in school and my oldest is a concrete Forman, and is going to be buying a farm soon. So most of the time it’s just me and my poppa getting the work done we sold the cattle in 2015 but we’re planning on getting them back in about 2-3 ish years when I’m done high school. And my poppa is the one showing me the ropes and what not. Anyways thanks for your time replying to my comment!
Yeah my grandpa was my mentor as well. Listen to the old guys! They seen it all and they know their stuff!
Too add to my question. Does this only happen i cattle? I have never seen or heard of this in other rumanants like goats deer elk or sheep. Is it a genetic issue in domestic cattle?
Having “Freemartin Twins” is the normal outcome for cattle that have mixed sex twins, as in there’s a 90% chance it will happen. However this phenomenon has also been recorded in sheep, goats, and even pigs, although it is far more rare in these animals as they commonly give birth to twins, unlike cattle. The reason this happens is not genetic in a sense, it is because when cattle carry twins there is typically fusion in the blood vessels in the chorion, which is a fancy way of saying the twins share a blood supply from the placenta. This causes her reproductive organs to not develop properly and usually leads to her displaying more masculine traits. It doesn’t really work both ways though, the male twin is basically unchanged. I hope that answers your question! Thanks Tammy
always love your video so true
Thank you so much!
This is an interesting point, but look at the cow she has 4 teats, which tells you she has 4 quarters, so why take one of.
I'll explain most of you guys there are raising cattle on a systems much like here in the UK, my dad was a stockman on a beef suckler farm for over 50 years, they used too rear calves brought from auction just like some of you do each cow would be stalled and have 4 calves too rear upto 8 weeks they went out to pasture this was the cows the calves were housed until 6 months old then go out on pasture the rearing of 4 calves per cow did not put anymore strain on the cow as you can supplement her feed ad he used to, a mix of rolled oats, and brood cow nuts he reared thousands of calves this way and never lost a cow or calf
O
I feed the cow myself and let my kids feed the cows let them enjoy the farm and work in the Farm
what to do with twin calves? love them twice as much.
Wow! I'm glad humans aren't wired the same as cattle! I'd have abandoned the smarter one of my twins! You'd never know to look at her today that she started out at only 4lbs 11oz. LMAO
Haha I bet your kids are glad too! Just don’t tell them which one you refer to as the “smarter one” haha!
When you sell a heifer that is a twin are you required (requested) to tell people that she won't be able to reproduce?
No. That’s just the chance you take at the auction
Thanks for this question and answer!
We got sheep last year in Ag Ed class 3 or 2 sheep
Here we like to let the cows feed twines if that does not work we will feed it or if a cow loses a calf we will try and graft it onto her. We have some Angus/Holstein cows and we have 12 pure Angus cows we find the pure breed calves end up sucking on the cross breed cows for more milk!!
Haha yeah I always laugh when I see a milk thief out there. Holstein crosses probably make enough milk for it too! Thanks Benjamin
@@farmertylerranch4399 Yea they do!
💖💖💖💖💖
In lactating animals its the law of supply and demand.the more theres a need for it the mom will produce
Yes that’s true up to a certain point. Thanks Debbie!
Nice looking calves.
Thanks mike I’m pretty happy with them this year! Thank you for watching
let them with the mother and feeds them one bottle each
at morning
we have dairy cows so when we have a twin everything is the same😂😂
Haha yeah I guess you’re right on that! Thanks for watching!
Usually raise calf on cow,but if rejects it I bottle feed the calf.
I know this is 5yrs ago
Contact FFA or 4H
I'd do the same as you, it depends on the cow
Remember a few videos back, you were loading all the dogs in the truck, I just said to my wife, I wonder how long until Tyler has to help that calf in and out of the truck along with the dogs! Lol
Yeah every situation is a little different. Some cows handle it fine, some not so much. Thanks Brad!
Haha that’s funny because it was suggested by my wife we try that!
@@farmertylerranch4399 please video it! Lol
I would bottle one. I couldnt see shooting one. It seems like that would be like burning money.
I wouldn't shoot calf because it's a twin
I'd do the bottle feeding 😆😆😆🌳🚜🌳
I had twin boys and girl lost both to car accident not my fault
I was pregnant at 5 1/2 months
Suggestion, you need to project your voice the volume of your videos is going down hill.
Yes I’ve bought a few mics since posting this one!
Interesting cows have 1 udder gland and 4 tits and goats and sheep have 2 udders glands and 2 tits - cows have 1-2 calfs and sheep and goats have 1-5 kids/lambs - nature is a funny thing
Haha! That is weird isn’t it? I think pigs are the only livestock that got the tit to number of offspring ratio figured out! Thanks Christa!
We gett a nurse cow
You can always take one to the sale barn which may be the best thing to do.
You might have a point there! Wonder what bottle calves bring these days? Thanks Arden! Good idea
I watched some sell on line and they have brought from $200 - $535 per calf which seems a little high. You can get them for less but the quality isn't there.
Wow I think we sold weaned calves for that much 20 years ago!
Around here, bottle calves are anywhere from $500-800/calf, depending on gender and breed. They're pretty popular with the 4H & FFA kids.
i would and have bottle feed it
That’s a good way to go! Thanks Robin
Alternate the calves with the mother.
Bottle feed
One vote for bottle feed. Thanks WesternWi Farms!
killing a calf is a waste of 1,000 dollars
Agreed!