Sunday, April 7, 2013

Bambi's Story

One of our Jersey cross calves, Bambi ( named him that because he looked just like a baby deer when we got him :), who we had grafted (adopted) onto our Jersey nurse cow, Honey. Honey had a very bad abscess in her hoof, so we had to give her an antibiotic shot, it was a lot medicine too. So then the very next morning, I found Bambi almost dead. He couldn't even lift hi head! Let alone stand to nurse her. So I had to tube him (literally stick a tube down his throat because he couldn't suck a bottle) with electrolytes so he can get re-hydrated and get his energy back. I definitely think this is from the antibiotics we gave Honey, because it goes right into her bloodstream, which goes right into her milk, which goes right into poor Bambi :(


After about a week, Bambi finally got better. He could walk and nurse, but his front left leg didn't work. He would just drag it around. Me and Deloy splinted it, but that didn't do anything. And after a while, Bambi started getting wounds on the leg from dragging it. So I wrapped it to protect it, but i had to move him and Honey to an outside pen (from the barn where they were) where it had snowed; yes this is all happening in the middle of 0 degree winter! Only a week later, I took off the bandage because it had gotten wet, and the wound had become infected. It spread to wrap around his whole leg. Eventually, his whole hoof/bone up to his fetlock joint (the wrist or ankle) was just hanging on by a thread, like a loose tooth. I could even kinda twist it, yuck. Then one morning I found that darn hoof laying on the ground, and it stunk real bad too!

Bambi's leg is still healing, and he will kinda walk on his half leg. He is a waste of a calf technically because we won't be able to sell him, and he is a Jersey so he isn't beefy at all. So he will be for our home dinner table. But he is/was definitely a good learning experience!

Monday, January 14, 2013

Fun day in the snow


Janika (in the purple) and her friends
Trey got snowed!
 Fun day in the snow. The neighbors brought over their ATV and attached two sleds to it and pulled the kids around in the snow covered alfalfa field.
Our audience







Lottie and her boyfriend, Shep

Friday, January 11, 2013

Winter pictures

 We've gotten at least eight inches of snow so far, more to come and colder weather just around the corner. I'm happy if it gets above 20 degrees! Today it is 10. I like living in the snowy winter, except for the water freezing, and if it's a windy day, it's hard to do anything outside, but I still like it here a lot! The animals seem just fine in this weather, they are very tough little buggars!



Lottie keeping watch over everything, she goes straight to this spot, or right next to the fence, every day.  This is also the truck Jeff got, it's got issues, but it gets the job done. It's practically impossible to not have a truck on a farm!
The big calf pen, they get to be outside now and run around,
very happy boys!


Trey driving, Marina on the sled.
 It worked fine until the truck died-again!
Our herd is growing! 

Our newest arrivals

Three Holsteins we got a couple months ago, a lot bigger now!

Mr. Fluffy, our very manly rooster :) 
Milk and Dark Chocolate 
We got these two Brown Swiss on Saturday

They are getting bigger!

yummy milk! The more drool the better!


Billy-bob
our potbellied pigs
How Now the brown cow
Moo-moo




Miss Piggy
Steak (little lover boy)
Apple (soon to be butchered :)
Lottie saying hi to Apple



More of Mike's cows (our pasture renter), and some of our young heifers

One of Mike's heifer calve
Mr. Bull, kinda creepy looking, but he's nice




one of our young Angus girls, should calve in spring



Honey and Bambi

We are not sure what the plan for Honey is. 
Her calf will be weaned soon, and she is only
giving about a gallon of milk a day (not very
much!). She is old, 9-10 yrs. I would like to
keep her a little longer for milk (she is so 
sweet too!), otherwise she might have to 
become hamburger since she isn't bringing
 in any income....life of a cow.

When we first got Honey, poor girl super boney



Honey and her grafted (adopted) calf Bambi

Honey now, nice and fat!