How long do YOU wait before pulling a calf? What are your cues?
Friday night we had a heifer that was bred to Stetson, a CE Limousin bull, due Monday, start Pre labor around 6:30 or so. She wasn't pushing hard at any point. Just kinda laying there in the stall with her tail out, occasionally her tail would not even be really out. She was inside, which I kinda wonder if she had been in the pasture if we had even noticed her before 8:30. At any rate, I palped at 9:30 when there hadn't been much progress and could tell it was a small calf and lined up right. Feet were six inches back or so with nose right there behind them, calf was squirmy alive...... An hour later still no real progress, heifer still not really pushing. So we pulled, as I was hooking calf up, heifer started pushing, made quick progress but then stopped pushing so we went ahead and pulled.
68 pound heifer calf, in no way should have had to be pulled if the heifer had actually tried. Hard to say we were wrong in pulling considering with the weather we had and are having we have a live calf in the shed, but I kinda feel like if we had left her alone she would have had it when ever she decided to push. Thought about giving her some oxytocin to make her push, but we didn't have any on hand and weren't gonna bother the vet at ten on Friday night without NEEDING to. I hate that we pulled the calf, heifer is plenty big enough and pelvis wise to have had it on her own, but she was four hours in and it was eleven by the time we got the calf pulled, and at the end of the day. Live calf.....
Friday night we had a heifer that was bred to Stetson, a CE Limousin bull, due Monday, start Pre labor around 6:30 or so. She wasn't pushing hard at any point. Just kinda laying there in the stall with her tail out, occasionally her tail would not even be really out. She was inside, which I kinda wonder if she had been in the pasture if we had even noticed her before 8:30. At any rate, I palped at 9:30 when there hadn't been much progress and could tell it was a small calf and lined up right. Feet were six inches back or so with nose right there behind them, calf was squirmy alive...... An hour later still no real progress, heifer still not really pushing. So we pulled, as I was hooking calf up, heifer started pushing, made quick progress but then stopped pushing so we went ahead and pulled.
68 pound heifer calf, in no way should have had to be pulled if the heifer had actually tried. Hard to say we were wrong in pulling considering with the weather we had and are having we have a live calf in the shed, but I kinda feel like if we had left her alone she would have had it when ever she decided to push. Thought about giving her some oxytocin to make her push, but we didn't have any on hand and weren't gonna bother the vet at ten on Friday night without NEEDING to. I hate that we pulled the calf, heifer is plenty big enough and pelvis wise to have had it on her own, but she was four hours in and it was eleven by the time we got the calf pulled, and at the end of the day. Live calf.....