Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Defying the odds...

... and not necessarily in a good way. Our fourth Black Hereford calf was also our third red calf. Even if our last two heifers have black calves (and one will for sure), we're at 50% red.

The good news is it's a beautiful little heifer, no problems. She'll have some beautiful black calves paired with our homozygous black bull in a couple years.

John Wayne 20 x SF Lady Jayne 341

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

A Miracle

Our third Black Hereford calf arrived on Saturday evening... just barely. Her mama is not very big, and she is. She got stuck at the shoulders, and after some fruitless pulling, we called the vet. Just after the call, Troy was able to get the shoulders out, but just as Melissa was preparing to call the vet back and tell him not to come, the hips got stuck.
There was no way we were getting the hips free. The calf was breathing, so we just kept Mama down and waited for the vet. The nearest good vet is 25 miles away, so we were waiting a while.
Once it was all over, we had a partly paralyzed cow and a pretty traumatized calf. Though only 81 pounds, she is a big-boned baby! We tube fed her some colostrum replacer and put her in the warmer for the night.
Sunday was the same. She showed very little interest in sucking, and we were quickly giving up on her. The heater quit working in the calf warmer, and it was bitter cold. While Mama wasn't showing much interest in the calf, we still didn't want to separate them, so Melissa made a little fleece jacket to help keep the chill off.
Brockel Brut 118 x SF Lady Jane 311

Monday morning, Mama was wobbly but on her feet. We helped baby stand up a couple times, and she showed much more interest in eating while she was on her feet. By evening, she was able to get up on her own.
And here she is on Tuesday, running and bucking.

Much to our surprise, after two days, her mama did decide to mother her, and they are both doing great now. She is red, and unfortunately, her daddy is a half-brother to our homozygous black bull, but she is such a good-looking heifer that she may stick around anyway, even if it's just in the commercial herd. After all she went through, she deserves a chance.

We've named her Miracle.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Not what we expected

Calf #2 snuck in on March 5. We had to sort off a load of fat Holsteins to ship off and checked the heifers beforehand - no action. Just a couple hours later, a glance in their pen revealed a calf already up and looking for breakfast! He was definitely not what we expected.

John Wayne 20 X Midnite Lady 1640 bull calf

Since Black Herefords are a high percentage of Hereford blood and most carry a red color gene, you expect around 25% of the calves to be red. We had expected these red calves to look like Herefords, not Red Angus.
Nevertheless, a healthy calf with an unassisted delivery and attentive first-time mama who lets us handle her baby without fuss is always a good thing, and we'll get to see how our Black Hereford calves perform on the feedlot.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Our first calf has arrived!

Our first Black Hereford calf arrived on March 4, a beautiful completely bald-faced heifer. She was welcomed by a sleet storm and icy cold wind. Melissa barely missed her birth. Mama got up just when Melissa arrived at the barn for the 3:30 a.m. check.
She weighed a feisty 72 pounds and made our first experience with weighing a calf quite a challenge!

John Wayne 20 X Midnite Lady 1620 heifer

Monday, March 4, 2013

Welcome to TMD Black Herefords!

Hello, we are Troy and Melissa Denelsbeck, and we have just begun our journey into breeding registered Black Hereford cattle. We are located in southwestern Minnesota, eight miles from South Dakota and 90 miles from Iowa.
This blog will be our place to talk about our journey, offer information about this breed, and eventually, God willing, list cattle for sale.
Welcome, and we hope you'll join us on our journey.


JRK 616 Ozzie Legacy 023