It's a very old way you guys handle your cows and calf's, 100 years ago your practices would of been common place, I grew up with my grandparents milking 2 - 4 cows split calving across the year to give the family fresh milk, butter and cream year round, the calves were on their mum's during the day and locked up at night, the calves always had plenty and so did we, I think you guys have found the perfect balance between production of milk, calf health and overall wellbeing for both cow and calf. Well done this is probably the most humane way to milk cows. Ohh and old trick I was taught by grandpa "if the cow has problems letting down put the calf on her for a minutes then milk the cow"
There is a lot of old knowledge that is in danger of being lost. I was fortunate enough to have a mentor who started dairying in the 1930’s that I learned a lot from. I’m also a big fan of old Extension Publications. That said, there are also some amazing technical advances in the industry. The key is just finding the right balance. Thanks for watching!
I've been doing some calf-sharing on a 50 cow dairy for a few years now. My best advice to someone wanting to try it in a commercial dairy setting, is be flexible. With calf rearing, you don't have to completely commit to a single way of raising calves. If you have two heifer calves born in April to third lactation dams, let the calves run loose with the milking herd. If you get 15 calves all born at once in August, raise them as a group in the forest. If you have a couple calves born to first-calf heifers in January, bottle feed them indoors for a bit. Just play with it a bit. Have a little fun changing it up, and trying different methods of calf-rearing. You'll learn a lot more about raising calves by raising them in a variety of settings.
Thank you for sharing! We sincerely appreciate your input here. You were so helpful to us in the beginning with your advice when we were thinking about calf sharing. Thanks for watching!
Thanks! Eventually we should be able to ship some cheeses, so keep that in mind. I’m sure we’ll do an announcement when that time comes. Thanks for watching!
We calf share and it is AMAZING!!! Our first time doing it was with our first freshener holstein heifer with her angus x calf. We had a little trouble with let down when baby was on momma 24/7 but we still got what we needed. At 7 weeks old baby was taking everything so we started separating at night. At first I'd only milk the 2 front quarters while baby got the backs and we'd get anywhere from 1 to 1.5 gallons. Once she got about 4 to 5 months I'd let her get momma started, then kick her out, milk then let her out with mom for the day and we'd get 1.5 to 2.5 a day. We did that for 9 months, popped weaning ring in and dried mom off at 10 months. Knock on wood no udder health issues or any negatives. We got to have a milk cow and have a life lol. We have a first freshener jersey due in the next week or 2 and we will be doing the same with her. Mommas are happy babies are happy, we are happy
Very cool operation. It's good to see that this management plan results in plenty of milk for everyone. In my extremely limited experience, I can see the merits in calf sharing or, with goats, kid sharing. This year was our first kidding, with three bottle babies and one kid left with her mom. The kid that was nursing from her mom is just as tame and friendly as the bottle kids, it's not like that was a major advantage. In the future, I'll probably kid share if possible. We've had plenty of milk from our dairy does and kid sharing would allow some more flexibility in terms of schedules.
So good to see you everyday now ,,any info is good and having animals in the background always is a plus while you're talking because we can't get to farms anymore to see how they grow and run...thanks farmers...p.s. we did realize that both of you served our country , God bless you both...
Glad you enjoyed the video. The surprising thing to us is how many dairy farms actually do it… they just don’t put that information out there. Obviously we’re big fans of it, so we’re happy to hear of someone else doing it as well! Thanks for sharing!
Youre fully whright about the whole deal, and makes life so much easyer but we have to sell the farm and start over again i quess, but never the less we still produce very healthy and white milk every day, thanks and greetings from a Dutch dairyfarmer
Thanks to Stacy’s love of all things cheese curd adjacent, I discovered Culver’s in Meridian, ID when I was there earlier this week. Delicious! Thanks. I would never have gone out of my way to find it and try it out without watching your channel😁.
@@vnthomas16 You two probably never fully know your influence. My diet couldn’t take it if a Culver’s opened in the Tri-Cites, WA, where I live. I totally understand Stacy making a stop there on both legs of the trip😆.
We milk some ewes for our milk and to make cheese. We leave the lambs with their mothers for 35 to 40 days and wean. We get less milk while lambs are there but they need to drink something. I haven't had trouble with udders or milk let down. Thanks for the video.
You’re welcome! It’s true, the babies need to drink something. No matter what, you pay. But we’ve found this to be the best investment in their health, and our time and energy.
Calf sharing works great for our mini jersey cow. I got 3/4 gallon with once a day milking, the calf got the rest. I separated at 8 pm and milked at 6:30 am. It is reassuring to know that I could leave the calf on full time if needed since I am the only one that milks the cow.
Calf sharing does certainly make it easier to get away! If it wasn’t for Daisy losing her calf this year, we probably could have done our recent trip to Arizona without milking and been fine. But Daisy makes too much milk for that. We have friends who calf share and they typically skip milking on Sunday’s. They’ve even gone out of town for a few days and been fine not milking their cows. Thanks for watching!
Calf sharing does certainly make it easier to get away! If it wasn’t for Daisy losing her calf this year, we probably could have done our recent trip to Arizona without milking and been fine. But Daisy makes too much milk for that. We have friends who calf share and they typically skip milking on Sunday’s. They’ve even gone out of town for a few days and been fine not milking their cows. Thanks for watching!
Terrible! Haha! We’re pretty much done for the year, other than possibly a dismal second cutting of alfalfa. We got about 30% of our usual yield with the drought here.
Thank you for this video! You have been such a beacon of light for my family. We have our first family cows, and she calved a beautiful baby girl two weeks ago. Would you explain for you wait 8 weeks (I think you mentioned) before you separate and start milking. We are learning all of this and trying and you are truly a guidance. Thank you!
We start milking right away. As soon after birth (within an hour) we milk for colostrum for the baby which we bottle feed this one time to ensure 100% that the baby got it. Then we just start milking everyday in the morning after that. The baby is of course nursing at will during this time as well. We separate at night after 8 weeks so we get a little more milk for us, but there is still plenty for the baby.
@@vnthomas16 thank you for taking the time to clarify! So you start milking but you don't separate the baby yet, you only separate at 8 weeks... so when you milk without separating- did you milk in the morning? Even if baby was with momma at night?...but you start separating at 8 weeks for more milk... thank you!
We have a very very very small place. We have 3 cows. 2 of them are A2A2...one is A1B. We were thinking that when we have calves, to put all the calves on the A1B mother (half holstein, half ayrshire)...since she'll have plenty of milk.
Nurse cows are not uncommon and can be a good solution. Not all cows are willing to adopt other calves however. While we’ve never had udder/teat issues with our cows due to nursing, I’d definitely keep a good eye out down there if you have three calves on one cow. Best of luck!
We do standard 10 month lactations. Sometimes a little shorter if a cow calved in late. Being seasonal, we all take a few months off together. It’s a good system that works well for us. Thanks for watching!
We let the calves out after milking (once we start separating at night around the 8 week point). We typically leave one quarter with milk on the cow so the baby can get breakfast!
We just bought a Jersey fresh in milk from a dairy. We bought a calf also, to keep on her. She is only giving milk in three quarters. Would it be ok to calf share? Or would sharing take too much from the calf??
Every cow is different, and with the changes in the lactation curve of the cow and the consumption of milk from a growing calf, it’s had to pin down numbers. They way we look at calf sharing, we make sure the calves get enough, and we take what’s left. We leave the calf with momma 24/7 for the first 8 weeks. After that, we do separate the calf at night, milk in the morning, and then reunite them all day until weaning around 6 months old. Three teats doesn’t mean much… I’ve seen 3-quarter cows milk more then 4-quarter. It’s all up to the individual cow. Hope my rambling makes sense. Thanks for watching.
@@vnthomas16 this was the perfect answer for me. I will do exactly what you have advised. I love the thought of sharing!! Also, I am very happy to hear that 3 quarters vs 4 really won’t make a difference. Right now the calf gets all of it. Lol. It will be 6 more weeks until we begin to share. Thank you for answering!!!
We have dexter cattle and hand milk for our own consumption. We love calf sharing since we only need a few gallons a week. Calf sharing allows us to only milk a few times a week and let the calf take care of it the rest of the time. This year we had a cow abort 6 weeks early so we have been milking her full time. I will definitely be grateful when we return to only milking a few times a week.
We have one cow that sadly had a stillborn this year. We still milk her just once a day, but with no calf to pick up the slack, we definitely have to make sure she gets milked every day!
I'm not the author of this video, but I'll answer for myself anyway. I run calves with the milking herd 24/7. I don't separate at night. I don't feed the calves anything special. They just nibble on whatever their mothers are eating, whether that's pasture grasses or a corn-silage-based ration. Around six months, I install a "quiet-wean" flap in the their nose. Most calves go right on with life without hardly noticing that they can no longer nurse. The worst case I had recently, was a calf who moped around for two days before resigning itself to a milk-less diet. After that, it was completely fine.
We appreciate Kipps input on this. In fact, he was very kind in sharing his experiences with us when we were looking into calf sharing. Anyway, what we do is the calves run with the cows 24/7 for the first 8 weeks or so, and then we separate at night. We wean at six months as well. They get locked up one night, but the next morning they just don’t get let out. Their pen is adjacent to the cow pen, so they can see, smell, touch noses, etc. But, it’s pretty low key. They hardly notice they didn’t get let out that morning. Pretty low stress. Then, the weaned calves just start grazing on their own pasture. I think this year we will try the “quiet-wean” flaps as well. Already bought some in fact. Then we can just keep them all together as one herd.
I don't get it, do I milk in the afternoon and then in the morning put them back with their momma? If someone can help out, this is our first cow and first calf..
Your cows udders are are very square and healthy. Do you dip the teats in any iodine or chlorine solutions after milking? I milk about 850 Jerseys in California
No, no issues. There’s always a bit of milk left behind anyway, and the calves stripping out the udder actually improves udder health. Thanks for watching!
For the most part, we’re just running the yearlings with the rest of the herd. They’re old enough now that we can combine them so we’re only having to manage one herd instead of two.
The butterfat is all in the “hind milk”, at the end. So, if we’re going to leave milk for the calf, we use a plug in the milking machine and completely milk out three quarters, rather than remove the machine early and leave milk in all quarters. If the cow decides to hold up her milk, that can be very frustrating and an exercise in patience! We’ll use warm rags to massage the udder, and on a very few occasions, bring the calf into the milking parlor. We try and avoid doing that if we can though. Thanks for watching!
Calf sharing seems most respectful to God's animals. It aligns with gradual weaning that would happen naturally. Taking some milk, but not ignoring that the milk is primarily for the calf's benefit, is in alignment with the sentiment of Exodus 34:26 KJV, which of course, has a spiritual meaning, also, of not scorching someone, who is new in the salvation milk of His Word, with the consuming fire of His Word.
Thank you for your wonderful comment! Cows are the “Foster Mother’s of the Human Race”, but there is plenty of milk to go around. We just love to watch the interaction between the cow and her baby. Nobody can teach a calf how to be a cow better than a cow. We just try to be the best stewards we can to the animals and land entrusted to our care.
LOL. Thought the title said calf SHEARING.. Had immediate questions. 1) What is it? 2)Why? 3) How? Much relieved you didn't denude those little calves. Calf sharing works for your operation and obviously the calves are thriving. Hope you never shear any calf. Note to self: Be awake when viewing yt.
It's a very old way you guys handle your cows and calf's, 100 years ago your practices would of been common place, I grew up with my grandparents milking 2 - 4 cows split calving across the year to give the family fresh milk, butter and cream year round, the calves were on their mum's during the day and locked up at night, the calves always had plenty and so did we, I think you guys have found the perfect balance between production of milk, calf health and overall wellbeing for both cow and calf. Well done this is probably the most humane way to milk cows. Ohh and old trick I was taught by grandpa "if the cow has problems letting down put the calf on her for a minutes then milk the cow"
There is a lot of old knowledge that is in danger of being lost. I was fortunate enough to have a mentor who started dairying in the 1930’s that I learned a lot from. I’m also a big fan of old Extension Publications. That said, there are also some amazing technical advances in the industry. The key is just finding the right balance. Thanks for watching!
Your practice is more humane and natrual. Keep up the good work. 👍
Thank you!
I've been doing some calf-sharing on a 50 cow dairy for a few years now. My best advice to someone wanting to try it in a commercial dairy setting, is be flexible.
With calf rearing, you don't have to completely commit to a single way of raising calves. If you have two heifer calves born in April to third lactation dams, let the calves run loose with the milking herd. If you get 15 calves all born at once in August, raise them as a group in the forest. If you have a couple calves born to first-calf heifers in January, bottle feed them indoors for a bit.
Just play with it a bit. Have a little fun changing it up, and trying different methods of calf-rearing. You'll learn a lot more about raising calves by raising them in a variety of settings.
Thank you for sharing! We sincerely appreciate your input here. You were so helpful to us in the beginning with your advice when we were thinking about calf sharing. Thanks for watching!
The calves look great! I wish I lived close enough to buy your products
Thanks! Eventually we should be able to ship some cheeses, so keep that in mind. I’m sure we’ll do an announcement when that time comes. Thanks for watching!
Amazing that you keep mum's and calves together for longer . Brilliant compassionate farming . Lovely couple 💖
We really feel it’s the best way!
Thank you. Dreaming of my first cow
You’re welcome!
We calf share and it is AMAZING!!! Our first time doing it was with our first freshener holstein heifer with her angus x calf. We had a little trouble with let down when baby was on momma 24/7 but we still got what we needed. At 7 weeks old baby was taking everything so we started separating at night. At first I'd only milk the 2 front quarters while baby got the backs and we'd get anywhere from 1 to 1.5 gallons. Once she got about 4 to 5 months I'd let her get momma started, then kick her out, milk then let her out with mom for the day and we'd get 1.5 to 2.5 a day. We did that for 9 months, popped weaning ring in and dried mom off at 10 months. Knock on wood no udder health issues or any negatives. We got to have a milk cow and have a life lol. We have a first freshener jersey due in the next week or 2 and we will be doing the same with her. Mommas are happy babies are happy, we are happy
We love calf sharing! We’ll never go back!
Very cool operation. It's good to see that this management plan results in plenty of milk for everyone.
In my extremely limited experience, I can see the merits in calf sharing or, with goats, kid sharing. This year was our first kidding, with three bottle babies and one kid left with her mom. The kid that was nursing from her mom is just as tame and friendly as the bottle kids, it's not like that was a major advantage. In the future, I'll probably kid share if possible. We've had plenty of milk from our dairy does and kid sharing would allow some more flexibility in terms of schedules.
We really enjoy our schedule and the freedom it allows us!
Your animals are so beautiful!
Thank you so much!
Thank you guys....your are awesome.
So good to see you everyday now ,,any info is good and having animals in the background always is a plus while you're talking because we can't get to farms anymore to see how they grow and run...thanks farmers...p.s. we did realize that both of you served our country , God bless you both...
Thank you for the support!
Keep up the great work!!! They all look great!
Thank you?
Great video. Good to hear more about this. We’ve been calf sharing for the last few years. Definitely hard to find a lot of information
Glad you enjoyed the video. The surprising thing to us is how many dairy farms actually do it… they just don’t put that information out there. Obviously we’re big fans of it, so we’re happy to hear of someone else doing it as well! Thanks for sharing!
Youre fully whright about the whole deal, and makes life so much easyer but we have to sell the farm and start over again i quess, but never the less we still produce very healthy and white milk every day, thanks and greetings from a Dutch dairyfarmer
Thanks for your comment! Yes, every dairy farm is different. This is just what works for us.
Thanks to Stacy’s love of all things cheese curd adjacent, I discovered Culver’s in Meridian, ID when I was there earlier this week. Delicious! Thanks. I would never have gone out of my way to find it and try it out without watching your channel😁.
We’re glad we inspired you! Haha! We first discovered it when we lived in Wisconsin! Maybe someday they’ll expand to Washington???
@@vnthomas16 You two probably never fully know your influence. My diet couldn’t take it if a Culver’s opened in the Tri-Cites, WA, where I live. I totally understand Stacy making a stop there on both legs of the trip😆.
I gained so much weight when I worked for 8 years within walking distance to a Culver's! 😅
We milk some ewes for our milk and to make cheese. We leave the lambs with their mothers for 35 to 40 days and wean. We get less milk while lambs are there but they need to drink something. I haven't had trouble with udders or milk let down. Thanks for the video.
You’re welcome! It’s true, the babies need to drink something. No matter what, you pay. But we’ve found this to be the best investment in their health, and our time and energy.
We calf share too!
We love it. Seems to work the best for everyone involved, us dairy farmers, the momma cows, and the babies!
Calf sharing works great for our mini jersey cow. I got 3/4 gallon with once a day milking, the calf got the rest. I separated at 8 pm and milked at 6:30 am. It is reassuring to know that I could leave the calf on full time if needed since I am the only one that milks the cow.
Calf sharing does certainly make it easier to get away! If it wasn’t for Daisy losing her calf this year, we probably could have done our recent trip to Arizona without milking and been fine. But Daisy makes too much milk for that. We have friends who calf share and they typically skip milking on Sunday’s. They’ve even gone out of town for a few days and been fine not milking their cows. Thanks for watching!
Calf sharing does certainly make it easier to get away! If it wasn’t for Daisy losing her calf this year, we probably could have done our recent trip to Arizona without milking and been fine. But Daisy makes too much milk for that. We have friends who calf share and they typically skip milking on Sunday’s. They’ve even gone out of town for a few days and been fine not milking their cows. Thanks for watching!
great video good looking herd . God bless
Thank you!
Great informative video! Definitely works for your dairy operation. 😊👍💪
Thank you! Yes, every operation is different, but this works well for us!
Thank you for sharing!
You’re welcome!
Great video. Very informative. Thank you.
You’re welcome!
How’s the haying? It looks dry. 😢
Terrible! Haha! We’re pretty much done for the year, other than possibly a dismal second cutting of alfalfa. We got about 30% of our usual yield with the drought here.
@@vnthomas16 I’m so sorry. That was us last year. This year, it’s the wettest July since 1915🚣♀️
Inspiring
Mooovelous!
Udderly fantastic!
This was great! Can't wait to visit you next time I'm in that part of the state!
Glad you enjoyed it!
When are you guys going to a milking and bottling video(s)?
We’ve done a few of those in the past. You can check one out here: ruclips.net/video/LGBBo5xNRs8/видео.html Enjoy!
Love this.
Thank you for this video! You have been such a beacon of light for my family. We have our first family cows, and she calved a beautiful baby girl two weeks ago. Would you explain for you wait 8 weeks (I think you mentioned) before you separate and start milking. We are learning all of this and trying and you are truly a guidance. Thank you!
We start milking right away. As soon after birth (within an hour) we milk for colostrum for the baby which we bottle feed this one time to ensure 100% that the baby got it. Then we just start milking everyday in the morning after that. The baby is of course nursing at will during this time as well. We separate at night after 8 weeks so we get a little more milk for us, but there is still plenty for the baby.
@@vnthomas16 thank you for taking the time to clarify! So you start milking but you don't separate the baby yet, you only separate at 8 weeks... so when you milk without separating- did you milk in the morning? Even if baby was with momma at night?...but you start separating at 8 weeks for more milk... thank you!
We milk in the mornings. Regardless of what we’re doing with calves.
Thank you for sharing information
You’re welcome! Thanks for watching!
with cheese now being produced are you thinking about getting pigs to feed the whey to o
Our friend who takes care of the cows and milks when we have to be away from the farm has pigs, so we give the whey to him! Thanks for watching!
We have a very very very small place. We have 3 cows. 2 of them are A2A2...one is A1B. We were thinking that when we have calves, to put all the calves on the A1B mother (half holstein, half ayrshire)...since she'll have plenty of milk.
Nurse cows are not uncommon and can be a good solution. Not all cows are willing to adopt other calves however. While we’ve never had udder/teat issues with our cows due to nursing, I’d definitely keep a good eye out down there if you have three calves on one cow. Best of luck!
Big question how long can you continue to milk cows?
We do standard 10 month lactations. Sometimes a little shorter if a cow calved in late. Being seasonal, we all take a few months off together. It’s a good system that works well for us. Thanks for watching!
do you let the calves drink before milking or after milking
We let the calves out after milking (once we start separating at night around the 8 week point). We typically leave one quarter with milk on the cow so the baby can get breakfast!
So how many different flavored milks and yogurts do you make
We do Chocolate milk, Cafe Latte, and Egg Nog (Seasonally). We just to plain, cream top yogurt.
We just bought a Jersey fresh in milk from a dairy. We bought a calf also, to keep on her. She is only giving milk in three quarters. Would it be ok to calf share? Or would sharing take too much from the calf??
Every cow is different, and with the changes in the lactation curve of the cow and the consumption of milk from a growing calf, it’s had to pin down numbers. They way we look at calf sharing, we make sure the calves get enough, and we take what’s left. We leave the calf with momma 24/7 for the first 8 weeks. After that, we do separate the calf at night, milk in the morning, and then reunite them all day until weaning around 6 months old. Three teats doesn’t mean much… I’ve seen 3-quarter cows milk more then 4-quarter. It’s all up to the individual cow. Hope my rambling makes sense. Thanks for watching.
@@vnthomas16 this was the perfect answer for me. I will do exactly what you have advised. I love the thought of sharing!! Also, I am very happy to hear that 3 quarters vs 4 really won’t make a difference. Right now the calf gets all of it. Lol. It will be 6 more weeks until we begin to share.
Thank you for answering!!!
We have dexter cattle and hand milk for our own consumption. We love calf sharing since we only need a few gallons a week. Calf sharing allows us to only milk a few times a week and let the calf take care of it the rest of the time.
This year we had a cow abort 6 weeks early so we have been milking her full time. I will definitely be grateful when we return to only milking a few times a week.
We have one cow that sadly had a stillborn this year. We still milk her just once a day, but with no calf to pick up the slack, we definitely have to make sure she gets milked every day!
how long do you do that? till the mothers stop them or do you have a time that you wean
I'm not the author of this video, but I'll answer for myself anyway. I run calves with the milking herd 24/7. I don't separate at night. I don't feed the calves anything special. They just nibble on whatever their mothers are eating, whether that's pasture grasses or a corn-silage-based ration. Around six months, I install a "quiet-wean" flap in the their nose. Most calves go right on with life without hardly noticing that they can no longer nurse. The worst case I had recently, was a calf who moped around for two days before resigning itself to a milk-less diet. After that, it was completely fine.
We appreciate Kipps input on this. In fact, he was very kind in sharing his experiences with us when we were looking into calf sharing. Anyway, what we do is the calves run with the cows 24/7 for the first 8 weeks or so, and then we separate at night. We wean at six months as well. They get locked up one night, but the next morning they just don’t get let out. Their pen is adjacent to the cow pen, so they can see, smell, touch noses, etc. But, it’s pretty low key. They hardly notice they didn’t get let out that morning. Pretty low stress. Then, the weaned calves just start grazing on their own pasture. I think this year we will try the “quiet-wean” flaps as well. Already bought some in fact. Then we can just keep them all together as one herd.
great information
How long do you calf share? When and how do you take the calf off the cow?
We wean at between 5 and 6 months. It’s calf (and mother) dependent.
I don't get it, do I milk in the afternoon and then in the morning put them back with their momma? If someone can help out, this is our first cow and first calf..
Your cows udders are are very square and healthy. Do you dip the teats in any iodine or chlorine solutions after milking? I milk about 850 Jerseys in California
Hi there! We pre and post dip with Theratec from GEA. Thanks for watching!
But ... just asking, does it create an issue (a problem) if the calf nurse en empty mother after the morning milking.
No, no issues. There’s always a bit of milk left behind anyway, and the calves stripping out the udder actually improves udder health. Thanks for watching!
@@vnthomas16 Thank you ...
Printaboul -> Gaëtan Dupont, Quebec city.
I think it would be good for mama and calf.
We think it’s the best!
What happens to the male calves when they grow up?
We raise up all of our bull calves as steers here on the farm. Eventually they become grass-fed beef. Thanks for watching!
P.s. opps we did not realize you were in the service before
Yes, both of us are Veterans!
What happened to last year's calves I haven't seen them in your videos lately?
For the most part, we’re just running the yearlings with the rest of the herd. They’re old enough now that we can combine them so we’re only having to manage one herd instead of two.
I have a jersey heifer this her first calf. We calf share. The calf was born June 12. My only complaint is we get hardly any cream.
The butterfat is all in the “hind milk”, at the end. So, if we’re going to leave milk for the calf, we use a plug in the milking machine and completely milk out three quarters, rather than remove the machine early and leave milk in all quarters. If the cow decides to hold up her milk, that can be very frustrating and an exercise in patience! We’ll use warm rags to massage the udder, and on a very few occasions, bring the calf into the milking parlor. We try and avoid doing that if we can though. Thanks for watching!
Calf sharing seems most respectful to God's animals. It aligns with gradual weaning that would happen naturally. Taking some milk, but not ignoring that the milk is primarily for the calf's benefit, is in alignment with the sentiment of Exodus 34:26 KJV, which of course, has a spiritual meaning, also, of not scorching someone, who is new in the salvation milk of His Word, with the consuming fire of His Word.
Thank you for your wonderful comment! Cows are the “Foster Mother’s of the Human Race”, but there is plenty of milk to go around. We just love to watch the interaction between the cow and her baby. Nobody can teach a calf how to be a cow better than a cow. We just try to be the best stewards we can to the animals and land entrusted to our care.
Are y’all using AI or natural service
We use AI. We use New Zealand genetics for their grazing abilities.
LOL. Thought the title said calf SHEARING.. Had immediate questions.
1) What is it?
2)Why?
3) How?
Much relieved you didn't denude those little calves. Calf sharing works for your operation and obviously the calves are thriving.
Hope you never shear any calf.
Note to self: Be awake when viewing yt.
Hope we never have to shear a calf either! Haha! Thanks for watching!
Yemy chease
We really love cheese!
@@vnthomas16 sow do i i get my thue a farm sell thue anpi the good stuff