cjc
True BYH Addict
- Joined
- Jul 6, 2015
- Messages
- 479
- Reaction score
- 555
- Points
- 203
Poor guy. You did a great job with him.
Hi all! I have a silly newby question to ask...
For background, I am known among friends and apparently also among my husband's work crew as the pied Piper of broken things. In September, 2017, we got a call from one of hubby's laborers that he had found a calf alone in a ditch. Days later, he was still there and very weak. There were no cattle and no farmsteads to be seen for miles, so they brought him home and called us.
After nearly a week of doctoring, several hours driving back roads with the sheriff, and some very terse words after being called a thief, we tracked down the owner (who didn't know the calf was missing). He runs a few thousand head of Angus and didn't want a calf that couldn't just be put back on the mama, nor did he want to pay for my expenses in keeping the calf alive. In the end, he told us he would just throw it out in the pasture to live (he wasn't even bottle feeding well, he'd have died), then asked if we wanted a calf rather than paying me for my expenses. So we took him back home.
We made it through him being so dehydrated and malnourished that he was too weak to nurse, then scours, through respiratory illness that reared its head as soon as he was hydrated enough to make mucous, and after a few weeks I stopped reminding my son repeatedly that the calf might not be alive next time we came outside to tend him. We initially planned to band him when he was around 6 months old and stronger... but 9 months later, he is still intact and we are hearing time and again how nicely built he is. Some even going so far as to tell us he should be kept whole as a herd sire.
Now, my question is if he really is worth that? I've been around livestock all my life, it was ingrained when I was very young that the bull would as soon kill me than look at me, and that I wasn't even to be near the fence. I really did not plan to have cattle until a year from now. He is currently with my horses. He is thoroughly socialized and easy to handle. He leads, loads into the trailer, and is super chill, bit only about 500 lbs.View attachment 49564 View attachment 49565 View attachment 49566 View attachment 49570 View attachment 49569 View attachment 49566
Don't mistake me, he's still a bull and I absolutely understand the risks that are inherent to that. I've made a point of teaching my husband and son to never turn their backs on him, to always have a visual on him, to have an exit strategy ahead of time, and that he is not a pet. But in the end, as a small animal vet tech it drove me crazy having clientele that bred animals that should never reproduce.
So. Besides the fact that it's a pain and a hazard to keep a bull, confirmation wise is this guy worth keeping whole?