Valuable experience in dairy veterinary clinic

This is the age of the Internet, and the valuable experience of the past is no longer taken seriously, and the valuable experience is a bit out of date . Because as long as you want to learn any technology, there are free courses on the Internet and even videos that teach you hands-on, many valuable experiences are less and less valued, and it is becoming more and more difficult to rely on experience to get a high salary.

This morning, a heifer in our ranch gave birth, and by noon I went to see this first-born cow, but the calf still didn’t give birth. I did a simple inspection and found that the cow had dystocia, and timely midwifery was needed to ensure the safety of the cow and the mother.

Generally, cows are giving birth. The calf’s head is sandwiched between its legs. Generally, as long as the calf is not too big, it can produce normally by itself, as long as it is observed nearby without intervention. Cows dystocia are generally caused by an abnormal fetal position. For example, “horizontal birth” requires a midwifery. At this time, it is all based on the experience accumulated in long-term veterinary clinical practice, and certain skills and experience are needed to ensure the safety of cows and their children.

Through my rich and valuable veterinary clinical experience, and proper treatment of dystocia cows went well A child is born, and the cow and the mother and child are safe. This is a valuable experience. If you encounter a difficult labor of a cow, you may not be able to keep the calf and the calf without experience. Generally, in this situation, the principle is to protect the calf and not the calf. Of course, the best result is the cow and the calf. All cows are safe.

Speaking of the valuable experience of assisting dystocia cows, I remember that I was in my early twenties as a veterinarian on a large state-run dairy farm when I first graduated. Before going to work every day, several of my veterinary masters would sit in the veterinary room and chat for a while. The content of the conversations between the masters was usually about cow diseases and treatment. Back then, I was a veterinary apprentice in the dairy farm, but I was serious and serious. Listening to the chats of the masters, you are not qualified to participate, you can only be a listener sitting next to you.

What the masters talk about is usually their decades of veterinary clinical practice What I think and understand, many things are accumulated valuable experience for decades that cannot be learned in books, this is wealth, anyway, I have benefited a lot and even for a lifetime, until now I still remember some of the content, many until It can be used today, and it plays an important role in setting the tone at critical moments.

I am now older than my veterinarians Master, I am now fifty years old and have become an experienced cow veterinarian myself.

The difference is that now I am just exploring veterinary science alone, without People discuss and share together, and there is no atmosphere in which my several veterinary masters communicated, discussed and chatted together. If you want to keep improving and learning and growing, you need to communicate more with your veterinary colleagues. If you want to improve quickly, you have to learn and practice feedback, no matter how much communication there is no harm.