Farming question for those of you who might have tried or heard of others doing odd things in the past (@Joleneakamama, @NickF...):
Is it possible to mother a second calf, or pair of calves, onto a cow, after weaning the first?
At present I have five cows that calved in late summer (February), and as that's a bad time to calve here (we aim to calve in spring, August - September) I would like them to miss a year and get back to calving in spring. Right now it's mid-winter and they still have their calves on them, but once weaned the cows would be doing nothing useful for another year, and I need them to be earning me money.
Ideally I'd like to wean them in early August, give them a day to become thoroughly engorged, then mother a couple of newborn dairy calves onto each of them. The remainder of the herd will be starting to calve in August, so that would immediately get them back in sync with everything else, they'd have new calves at the same time. Lactation should pick up to align with the demand of the young calves and increased feed quality in spring, so physiologically it should work fine. To prove that point, my great-grandmother once milked a house cow continuously for either 2 1/2 or 3 1/2 years without calving (can't recall the story clearly!), production just dropped over winter and picked up again in spring each year. They're dairy cross cows and will certainly have enough milk.
The only question is whether I can actually persuade them to accept two new calves when they haven't just given birth. Have you ever heard of anyone even trying this? Everyone has tricks for how to mother on calves, but they're all aimed at cows who have recently given birth.
Is it possible to mother a second calf, or pair of calves, onto a cow, after weaning the first?
At present I have five cows that calved in late summer (February), and as that's a bad time to calve here (we aim to calve in spring, August - September) I would like them to miss a year and get back to calving in spring. Right now it's mid-winter and they still have their calves on them, but once weaned the cows would be doing nothing useful for another year, and I need them to be earning me money.
Ideally I'd like to wean them in early August, give them a day to become thoroughly engorged, then mother a couple of newborn dairy calves onto each of them. The remainder of the herd will be starting to calve in August, so that would immediately get them back in sync with everything else, they'd have new calves at the same time. Lactation should pick up to align with the demand of the young calves and increased feed quality in spring, so physiologically it should work fine. To prove that point, my great-grandmother once milked a house cow continuously for either 2 1/2 or 3 1/2 years without calving (can't recall the story clearly!), production just dropped over winter and picked up again in spring each year. They're dairy cross cows and will certainly have enough milk.
The only question is whether I can actually persuade them to accept two new calves when they haven't just given birth. Have you ever heard of anyone even trying this? Everyone has tricks for how to mother on calves, but they're all aimed at cows who have recently given birth.