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Starving Livestock

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    Starving Livestock

    I hope the rest of you on this site are
    not dealing with this situation in your
    community. A neighbour has approxmiately
    60 cows, 1/3 of them with calves on
    them. He turned them into an old pasture
    in October and that is where they are
    still. Prior to Christmas the
    temperatures dropped to -42 here, they
    had no feed, no shelter as the entire
    quarter section has no trees. The ALERT
    line was called, as were the RCMP.
    The owner takes one large bale of hay to
    these cattle every three or four days,
    or he takes a few square bales and
    tosses them out on the ground. Of course
    only a few of the cows eat, the rest are
    shoved away. The cows have eaten the
    branches of all the trees along the
    ditches adjacent to the property.
    Yesterday one cow was down, and this
    morning she is deader than a doornail
    with coyotes all around her.
    This property has 14 residences within
    half a mile all but two are acreages, so
    what image are they getting of the
    cattle industry ?
    The ALERT line was called again today,
    contact numbers were left but nobody has
    returned the call.
    The ALERT line is supposed to be
    directly connected to the SPCA livestock
    inspectors, and either they don't care
    or are so busy dealing with other cases
    like this they don't have the time to
    respond. The local RCMP will be
    contacted again tomorrow.
    The owner should be horse whipped and
    banned from ever owning even so much as
    a cat. Every one of us who has animals
    in our care knows the challenges we are
    dealing with in a winter like this one.
    Regardless of the price, or whatever
    hardship any particular farmer has,
    there is no excuse for starving animals.

    #2
    I hope you have some luck getting the RC's and maybe brand inspectors involved. In theory there is still a livestock impound location in every area. Starving a profit from a cow never works. Thanks for making people aware.

    Comment


      #3
      I should have clarified, this neighbour
      owns nearly 300 cows, only 60 of them are
      in this area, God only knows what is
      happening to the rest of them.

      Comment


        #4
        How about driving in to his place and have a coffee with him. Find out what the trouble is. There might be some underlying issues that could at least offer some insight. I'm pretty sure I would get company and help if something went awry here.

        Comment


          #5
          Driving to his place for coffee is out
          of the question. The fellow has a major
          drinking problem he has no concern for
          the livestock, and before Christmas was
          bragging at the local auction market
          that people who were paying huge amounts
          for hay were crazy, he was going to
          winter his cattle on pasture and there
          was no need to haul feed in for them.
          Anyone who knows their stock are out in
          -40 weather with no feed is beyond
          reasoning with. If the guy cannot afford
          feed, he can haul the cattle to market
          and sell them, because if they are
          seized by the SPCA that is exactly what
          will happen and he may end up banned
          from owning livestock.
          I know the situation well, have lived
          across from it for years and watched
          numerous times when cattle and horses
          were allowed to get skinnier than rails.
          I have seen cows down trying to calve
          for hours, and called every relative the
          guy has until somebody tracked him down.
          He and other heartless @@##$$ like him
          give our industry a bad name and should
          not be a part of it.

          Comment


            #6
            Nowadays even the good operators are struggling to stay in business. I bet this guy isn't going to be a cattle owner for much longer anyway. Since he's not feeding them, that's a pretty good indication that the money has run out. He's just too stubborn to admit it.

            I predict that next winter will not bring these problems again, because he will be done. We had a guy in our area who was the same, only on a smaller scale. He was eventually shut down, and his cattle were seized. He blamed all his problems on everyone but himself. It took hitting bottom to open up his eyes, but they did get opened.

            Comment


              #7
              Yesterday at the local feed store I
              heard comments about this same fellow
              overgrazing horse pasture last summer to
              the point that the horses had grazed to
              the dirt.
              It will be a relief when he is out of
              the business. Right now there are packs
              of coyotes chewing on a dead animal less
              than 200 yds from an acreage not owned
              by this guy. Neighbourhood dogs are
              hanging around the carcass so it is just
              a matter of time until we have dogs
              running in packs, and every livestock
              producer will pay dearly if that
              happens. Not to mention the fact that
              there are numerous families will young
              kids living close to this operation, and
              with nice weather kids are out skiing
              and tobogganing, not ideal to mix coyote
              packs and kids in my mind.

              Comment


                #8
                Thank you for caring about these animals. I do think though you have done all you can under the current rules. I would make sure that you document you calls and contacts and if you don't get reasonable service from the Alert line or the RCMP maybe a call to your MLA or a discussion with AFAC may get some results. I suspect that you are right this is a problem that may be happening all over the province this winter.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Well coppertop, it must sure be tough to have to stand by and watch this without being able to do more than you have. It is just brutal to have to watch someone else screw up so royally. I would agree - you have done what you can, but I'm sure that those words must feel about as empty as those cows stomachs.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    I know that the ALERT line got four
                    phone calls yesterday, and today, wonder
                    of wonders the family moved the cows up
                    to the farm headquarters. All it took to
                    move that bunch was a pickup with a few
                    forkfulls of hay. They had a quad and
                    someone in an SUV following them, one
                    cow was trying to climb over the
                    tailgate of the truck to the hay ! They
                    had a two mile drive to get them to the
                    homeplace. I will be following up with
                    ALERT to make sure someone is keeping an
                    eye out for the welfare of those
                    critters. I do not enjoy doing this, I
                    would much rather mind my own business,
                    but this is my industry too, and one bad
                    apple makes all of us look bad in the
                    eyes of urban types.
                    I would feel terribly sorry for the
                    owner if he was physically unable to
                    look after stock or if he had fallen on
                    hard times etc., but when money for
                    whiskey is more important than feed for
                    animals it gets my Irish up !!!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      This one hits close to home as we just
                      brought one bunch home off of grass on
                      Saturday (onto swaths). We had young
                      cows that gained 1/2 a BCS although we
                      did provide some bedding and were
                      supplementing a bit of barley. That
                      said, there was and still is a lot of
                      grass left on the quarter. Cows are
                      still out grazing grass and gaining
                      weight. There has to be grass/forage,
                      and shelter available. It can be done,
                      but it takes management. We even feed
                      test our grass so we know what we are
                      doing and what to expect, and we sure
                      wouldn't try it with calves still on the
                      cow.
                      Just turning cows loose to fend for
                      themselves is animal cruelty and has
                      absolutely no place anywhere, let alone
                      in this industry. It is also false
                      economy. A dead cow costs less to feed
                      than a fat one, but she produces
                      accordingly.
                      I suspect like most things there is more
                      to the story, but the creation of the
                      problem usually stems from something
                      that will lead to more problems in the
                      future.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        A followup with the SPCA this morning
                        was interesting. They were never
                        notified that messages had been left on
                        the ALERT line !
                        The SPCA will send an inspector out to
                        the property, make sure the livestock
                        owner knows he is under observation and
                        his livestock must be cared for.
                        In some areas I am sure that livestock
                        can forage but this area has over a foot
                        of snow on the ground, no trees on the
                        quarter for shelter, limited supply of
                        water running from a hose from a spring,
                        and no mineral in site. As I said in a
                        previous post I do not relish being
                        involved in this, but if one less animal
                        suffers then I am more than willing to
                        take any 'heat' that may come my way.

                        Comment

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