Thursday, August 7, 2014

Cutting off Horns

All the horns of the wicked also will I cut off; but the horns of the righteous shall be exalted.  Psalm 75:10

Back in November we posted HERE how we used dehorning paste to remove little Amy's horns.  It is a tricky process.  If you use too much of the paste, you run the risk of the acid running and possibly getting in their eyes, blinding them.  If you are on the cautious side and don't use enough, the horn bud isn't killed and it will grow back. Well, 8 months later one of Amy's horns started growing back.  Amy is not wicked (ha ha!), but we made an appointment with the veterinarian to get the horn cut off.

The veterinarian in town that we normally use didn't do this procedure, so we had to load up Amy in the trailer and bring her to Lake Charles for a short procedure to remove the horn.  After dropping off Amy at the vet for her day surgery, I went on to work, but Tricia watched the procedure.  The vet deadened the area on her head and sliced two long incisions, opening up her head. Then he took a large scoop-like device and scooped out the growing horn and roots. Just to be safe, he did the same on the other side as well. Poor Amy had copious amounts of blood streaming down her head. Tricia said it was hard to watch.  She wasn't in pain, though. Amy was loaded back in the trailer and Dad followed Tricia home.  Amy was unloaded and put back in the pasture.

Last night, however, the deer flies were giving her a hard time and she was using her back legs to scratch her head.  I didn't want her to open up the incision, so we let her sleep in the stall in the barn so she'd be away from the flies out in the pasture. 

Amy in the barn - a temporary recovery room after her procedure
The doctor had stitched her up and sprayed some silver stuff (AluSpray, I think) to protect the wound from bacterial infection.  It looked a lot like silver spray paint. After a rough day, she appears to be doing great now. You can see how the veterinarian shaved part of her head and made large incisions and then sprayed the silver stuff on her.

Ouch!
It had mostly stopped bleeding, but then she irritated it scratching against something and it started bleeding a little bit again.


The doctor did a good job closing up the incision and stitching it up.  We're to remove the stitches after a week.  If we lived closer, we'd take her back in, but we'll do it ourselves.  Once the wound heals up, you won't be able to notice.


We gave Amy some alfalfa pellets for a little treat and left her in the stall overnight. This morning when we went out to milk Daisy and Rosie she was doing just fine.


We put her back out into her paddock and she started eating grass.  It was probably a painful ordeal for her that could have been avoided (along with the $113 vet bill) had we been successful in dehorning her properly in the first place, but this is one of those situations that you use as a learning experience.  We'll either apply a bit more dehorning paste next time the cows calve OR we'll invest in a de-horning iron.  This is an electric appliance that heats up red-hot and is then held against the calf's horn bud to destroy the horn and prevent future growth.

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