It can if it is subject to excess cold and wet; scouring and BRD gets to be a problem with calves born and living in a cold and muddy environment with no shelter or dry straw to run to.
Yes cause the calf lives in the cold and yeah
Yes goats do get colds just like humans and also if a goat gets diaria just give it pepto besmol.
she gets burned on her calf and hands
Antigens are: proteins, polysaccharides, glycoproteins, or glycolipids. They cause the lymph system to respond by producing antibodies. Each time the body is challenged by an antigen, the stronger the immune system becomes. An infant, at first, gets many colds but as she gets more of them, she will have more antibodies to fight off colds she has had before. She will have fewer colds because she has the antibodies for many of them now.
There is no such thing as a "feedav" calf. However, a feeder calf, gets its hair a month or so before it's born and before it is declared a feeder calf. Calves are born with hair and retain their hair coats throughout their lifetime.
yes, some ingredients put in onions fights cancer it also gets fid of colds
Spongebob gets the suds
It's difficult to produce immunity to a common cold because the common cold is not one virus - it is over 700 viruses at last count. Rarely are more than 200 local to any particular area, but that is still, in effect, 200 different colds you can catch. Children tend to get the most colds, as all colds viruses are "new" to them. The amount of colds a person gets as they get older tends to decline, for that same reason - they've already had most of the indigenous colds viruses.
The most common cause of airway blockage is when the nose gets blocked through a common colds
First restrain the momma cow in a headgate or squeeze. Then get the calf up to it's momma's udder, and try to squirt some milk on its nose and mouth. Open the calf's mouth and insert the teat and help the calf to suck by squirting milk into the calf's mouth. You may have to keep doing this for a while until the calf gets it and starts suckling on its own. If the calf is too weak to suckle, you will have to milk out the cow and tube-feed the calf.
Muscle fibers in a calf grow in size and lengthen as the bones grow and develop. What a calf eats also determines the fleshing ability of a calf; a calf that is fed good quality milk and good forage is one that is more fatter, or has internal fat in with the muscle tissue as well as some external adipose tissue. Such a calf also tends to grow bigger than one that has been fed low quality forage and hasn't had much or very good quality milk. Such a calf tends to be thinner, leaner, and more ranky than a "soggy" calf.
No, Colds are caused by a virus.
First tie up the mother cow or serrogate mother in a stall or have her in a chute were you can easily access the udder. Hobble her in case she decides to kick. Next, guide the calf to the cow's udder and see if it will try to latch on. If not, open the calf's mouth and at the same time squirt some milk into the calf's mouth to get it to have a taste of it. You may have to put the teat into the calf's mouth and help it suckle by doing the similar thing mentioned previously. If it can't suckle enough to get adequate nutrients (first day after birth is vital the calf gets its colostrum), you will have to tube it orally. It is VERY important that the calf gets its colostrum after birth, otherwise its chances of surviving are very slim, even if the calf is 2 days old. But don't quit, get some electrolytes in it, and powdered colostrum (mixed with water of course.) Good luck!