Page 4 - CalfCare - Calving and Care of the Newborn Calf
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4 Intervene if calving is not progressing normally




After six hours (unless there is an
Intervene obvious reason for earlier
only when intervention) of being ‘sick to
necessary calve’ without the waterbag or
feet appearing, examine the birth
passage with a lubricated, gloved
hand. (Dispose carefully of the
gloves after calving).


Depending on what you find:

1. give more time to calve (calf normally presented and
cow straining intermittently) Attach ropes above the fetlocks
2. intervene if possible (e.g. calf with head or legs down)

3. ring your vet now (e.g. oversized calf, calf coming
backwards, dead or deformed calf, intertwined twins,
twisted womb, smelly or bloody discharge).


If in doubt, give the vet a call for advice, as rushing in to
assist when the cervix and vulva are not fully open can
be as detrimental as waiting too long to intervene.


If the calf hasn't been born two hours (three hours for
heifers) after the waterbag or foetal hooves have
appeared, examine the birth passage and the calf with
a lubricated gloved hand. (Dispose carefully of the
Set up calving jack
gloves after calving).


If the emergence of the waterbag or fetal hooves was
not observed, as long as the cow is straining and making
progress over half an hour, intervention is not required.


Intervention is required where the calving is not likely to
progress further at a normal rate without assistance or
where the calf appears distressed (swollen tongue or
head, bluish gums, poor reflexes). Assistance may be in
the form of:
o lubrication
o manual pulling of the calf
o pulling of the calf with the help of the calving jack.
Only pull when the cow is forcing
A decision must be made as to when the degree of
calving difficulty exceeds the skill of the operator and

when to seek veterinary assistance.
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