Congrats! I just got a 4 mo old dexter calf, and I'm so happy I did, --whe is great.
I got a set of cow hobbles, which I had used when I was the "milkmaid" as a kid job after school. The cow hobbles were for my Dexter heifer, in case she was kicky for her calf. I also was getting her used to udder being touched while grooming, no problem. However a nursing calf and gentle touching are not real close! Hence the hobble purchase in Shipshewana when I went thru last spring. No one locally sells cow hobbles.
Since we decided to sell the Heifer after another horse purchase, I sold the hobbles with the heifer, whom they plan to handmilk after calving. I advised them to be building her a milking platform, to raise her up for easy reaching. Heifer is about 42" tall, so you need to be sitting on the ground to milk and THAT is never a good place to be, while next to any cow. I told them she didn't mind the light touching, but she would need a lot more work to be good for hand milking. Getting platform ready, feeding her in it, while practicing hobbling, cleaning udder and handling udder before calving, would help them a lot.
Hobbles hook above hocks of hind legs, prevent the big REACH forward and outward swing of hind leg when kicking. Hobbles adjust in width for various sized animals. You can get a hooked stick to pull under cow and hook on 2nd leg to get them on. We used them in the Dairy parlor milking, but with cows in line, the ornery ones were squished in place a bit, could not get really fighting. Plus had FOOD right in front, so often easily distracted. Hobbles kept them from kicking off the machine, usually only needed a few times before they settled down. No damage to cow, just prevented hard kicking.
With your new heifer, be sure to be picking up feet often, daily if possible. She will be much easier to trim or treat for injury later on. DD's steer calf was very easy to trim hooves, get him neat for the Fair. She handled his feet often, stood hoof up, as nice as a horse to clean or rasp hooves!
If you plan to own her a while, working now, ALL body parts handled, not ticklish, is WELL WORTH the time invested. She will be a much nicer animal to have around. I will agree with the cute factor, she looks really "squeezable"!!
Great post! Thank you, as this helps me also. I never even thought about picking up the hooves, but my girl is now halter trained, and used to me touching her everywhere. Picking up the hooves will be part of the daily list.
Where in Shipshewana did you get the hobbles? i may be going for a road trip there in the spring. Also, do you have a pic of the milking stand? I was figuring on just sitting on a small stool--(my son made me one.)
Here's my girl, Annabelle: