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Gaucho calf processing

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    Gaucho calf processing

    Doc just wondering about your calving system.
    Do you ring, ear tag, selenium, a&d, iodine all
    new calves in a calving pasture? Or wait untill
    calves are older and run them through a handling
    system? Also with 700 you must be breaking that
    number up into 2 or 3 herds no?

    Currently I am field processing new calves first
    day they are born. Going to be trying out my
    quad pulled shark cage calf catcher in a bit here
    but I think I still been two guys one to hold calf
    one to doctor. If I could figure out how to rig
    something to hold the calf It would cut processing
    down to one man. Maybe a sheet of plywood
    with 4 holes for each leg???

    #2
    You could weld a pair of vice grips with
    flat plates on the jaws. Just drop a loop
    around the calf's back legs in the cage
    and hang them up...

    Comment


      #3
      Pretty good idea SMC, maybe even some long
      tarp straps made out of tire tube to tie the legs
      up. Weld some chain links on the walls of the
      shark cage to hook too. This route you get good
      access to the naval & nuts.

      Comment


        #4
        Maybe rope and something to wrap around on
        top of the cage would stop all kicking.

        Comment


          #5
          The purebreds get tagged and weighed and that's it... the commercials nothing.

          We vaccinate the 1st round at the end of June and booster sometime in the fall or winter depending on the year and the plans... Bulls that are not good enough get banded in the spring before grass.

          Keep it simple stupid is the motto

          Comment


            #6
            I'm not sure I understand your problem Allfarmer? -
            if you have them caught in a cage on day one why
            can't you handle them? either hold them against one
            wall with your knee or set them on their butt to ring
            them. Do your calves really need added selenium,
            a&d and iodine on day one? mine don't.

            Comment


              #7
              Perhaps a simple hinged gate on the inside with a chain on the end....swing gate around and squeeze calf, hook chain for hands free....have done similiar in my alley and seems to work fine.

              Comment


                #8
                What ever you do be carefull I was just on another website and guys were talking ,some people have lost their live at this time off the year.The tame old cows are the worse.JUST BE CAREFULL. I HAD MY LESSON

                Comment


                  #9
                  I like our don't get off the horse method
                  and DNA your replacements that we use. If
                  you have to help the cow should likely go.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    First heifer of 90 calved today, nice size heifer.
                    The vet here says we don't need to iodine but a
                    local producer with 400 head does. My neighbor
                    who doesn't was getting naval infections now he
                    does too. With green grass summer calving likely
                    not needed.

                    Grassfarmer, so of our newborn calves are
                    unbelievable lively. We had a newborn calf that
                    when we went to process it (few hours old) ran
                    through a barb wire fence 500 to 600' to the
                    creek, down and swam through the creek up the
                    other bank (25' down and then up again 6' wide
                    creek) he was then headed across an open field
                    about another 600' when I dove off the side of
                    the quad and tackled him. That guy was headed
                    for the Olympics! Black Angus vigor!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      AF, that calf was spooked bad. Your fault not his. Try a slower approach. HT

                      Comment


                        #12
                        That happened in our pasture a couple of years ago, except the calf ran across the pasture, through a fence, down the dugout bank, swam across the dugout and ran up a hill, through another fence, and laid down at the edge of a hayfield to hide.

                        And the stupid part was that his mother had hidden him, and when we followed her to see where the calf was, he took one look at HER, and ran for his life! His own mother! He didn't even know we were there until we stalked him in the hay, caught him and brought him back to Mama. Then the light bulb came on in his head and he realized who she was.

                        Duhhh..... by fall he was a nice big strapping guy, so it all worked out in the end.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Biggest thing with iodine is it prevents natures way of
                          drying off a navel. Sunshine, wind, outdoors heals
                          navels better than spraying with iodine which keeps
                          them soggy and raw.
                          We've all seen wild calves, I check and tag twice a day
                          and it's still sometimes a stretch to catch the odd
                          super fast one. If that kind of stupidity is an Angus
                          characteristic switch breeds.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Wifey says they don't do iodine in hospitals any
                            more on newborns like they used to.
                            I may have to agree with you on this one
                            grassfarmer. Man It was hard for me to say that!

                            Saw SMC in cattlemen magazine anyone else
                            catch that. Good lookin family, son's got a John
                            Deere shirt on all good. Cheers

                            Comment


                              #15
                              FWIW - we never iodine navels (not sure
                              we even have any in the cupboard
                              anymore). We have found the best
                              calving tool is an old/slow quiet horse,
                              but that is because our herd is handled
                              nearly entirely on horseback. In a quad
                              herd, a horse would raise a ruckus.
                              The cattlemen interview was fun, and
                              probably too flattering, although I am
                              proud of my kids. Billy bleeds green
                              and is under the full understanding that
                              he can buy whatever piece of new
                              equipment he wants as long as he has a
                              business plan to use it enough to make
                              the payments. (We pretty much all bleed
                              green here except for some of us the
                              paint is older and more faded)...

                              Comment

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