Lots to read this week including: Craik Skating Carnival, Music Festival, Peewee Huskies provincials, Raiders Hoopla, and much more.
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A three-headed calf takes its first steps in the calving pen. It was born in the Davidson area on March 24.
DAVIDSON—Guinness World Records and
Ripley’s Believe It or Not descended on Davidson last Monday, March 25 to verify
the birth of a three-headed calf.
The tricephalic red angus cross calf was
born at about 2 a.m. on Gordon Willner’s farm west of Davidson. It weighed 113
pounds.
It had been just another day on the farm
during calving season before the epic event took place.
The cow was expected to calve anytime, so
she was being monitored. As her time approached, it became apparent the birth
was not progressing as it should.
Concerned, Willner put his arm inside the
cow and felt one and then a second head.
Assuming it was a set of twins, he called for
assistance.
Dr. Olaf Lipro, a large animal veterinary
medicine resident at the University of Saskatchewan, answered the call for
help.
He arrived at the farm and performed an
examination, confirming there were indeed two heads. As the birth failed to
progress, he decided to perform an emergency cesarean section.
This was Lipro’s first emergency C-section
on a cow. He said he had performed one about three weeks ago on a pug that was
unable to deliver her pug/Rottweiler pups.
“That went fairly well, so I thought
getting these twins out of Gord’s cow should be a piece of cake,” Lipro said.
The cow was given a local anesthetic and
then Lipro performed the procedure as outlined in his textbook. As he pulled
one hind leg out, he grabbed the second hind leg and attached it to a calving
chain and gave a mighty tug.
The calf wouldn’t budge.
He said he was surprised with how difficult
it was to pull the calf out. The pug/Rottweiler pups came out easily, he noted.
With time and the cow’s life in the
balance, they had to work quickly in order to get the calf out safely.
Lipro pulled on the chains with all his
might. Finally the calf came free.
As he pulled it out of the uterus, he was
shocked to discover what he thought was the first calf of a set of twins was in
fact a three-headed calf.
“I was gob smacked, absolutely gob smacked,”
Lipro said.
He said he’s heard of two-headed calves
being born, but never a three-headed calf.
He said his first instinct was to take out
his iPhone and post it on social media.
Then he remembered that he had a job to do.
He checked the calf’s airways—all three of
them —to make sure the calf could breathe. One of the heads, the middle one,
was struggling. Lipro said he had to clear the amniotic fluid from its nostrils.
Some people use a piece of straw, but Lipro said he was taught a new method. He
said he uses the straw from a Tim Hortons Iced Capp, inserts it into a nostril
and sucks out the offending fluid. He said this is a technique other cattle producers
may want to use in their cow-calf operations. He said a straw from a Twisted
Sisters milkshake would also do in a pinch. He cautioned farmers from relying
on this, however, because Twisted Sisters is still closed for the season.
After he had the calf breathing, he turned
his attention to the cow. He cleaned her wound and stitched her up.
The calf was lying on the ground and having
difficulty sucking a bottle so Lipro quickly tubed colostrum in through its
left head.
“Then I thought, I might never get another
chance to do this, so I tubed the right head too just to see if I could.”
The calf started sucking on its own, but
had to be bottle fed for the first 48 hours as it struggled to its feet. By day
three, it was able to stand. Nursing proved to be a challenge as all three
heads butted with one another as they attempted to latch on.
Lipro said prognosis for the calf isn’t
good. Two-headed calves rarely survive more than a few days, and a three-headed
calf…Lipro said, “Only time will tell.”
This could be the first three-headed calf
in history, although mention was made of one being born in 1893 in Illinois.
In the Jan. 13, 1893 edition of the Mattoon
Gazette, out of Mattoon, Coles County, Illinois, the following report was
published: “As we go to press a Lafayette farmer reports a three-headed calf
born in the neighbourhood just southeast and a little north of the Monroe
school house. He requests concealment of his name that the guilty party may be
brought to justice.”…whatever that means.
Lipro said he did post a photo on
Instagram, which is how Guinness World Records and Ripley’s ended up swooping
into Davidson. He expressed regret for bringing all this attention to the
Willner farm.
“I let my ego get the better of me,” Lipro said.
“As soon as I saw it was a tricephalic calf, I began thinking about how I could
use this as my thesis topic when I do my PhD under Dr. Newt Scamander at vet
med’s College of Large and Unusual Animals.”
The batting cage at Davidson’s baseball diamonds is unfit for anything aside from being an eyesore. The pitching machine hasn’t been used in decades and the chain link fencing and metal poles are unsuitable for batting practice.
DAVIDSON—Minor ball players hit the streets
of Davidson Saturday, collecting bottles for batting practice.
They conducted a bottle drive to raise
money to buy a batting cage.
The initiative is being spearheaded by
Byron Dahl, coach of Davidson’s under-10 baseball team.
He wants to get a freestanding batting cage
so Davidson’s minor baseball and softball teams may hone their skills.
He’s looking at a batting tunnel with
fabric netting that is 70 feet long, 10 feet wide and 10 feet tall.
He said it could be set up in the rink so
teams can train with it indoors in April until the weather and diamonds are fit
for practicing outdoors.
The cage costs about $2,500.
He said he approached the Davidson Junior Athletic Association (JAA) for funding, but was advised that the JAA couldn’t justify this large expense for baseball when most of its revenues come from hockey and therefore, hockey fees would be subsidizing baseball. Davidson has seven minor ball teams this year.
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Donna Jean
Beaumont passed away in Saskatoon on March 25, 2019. She was predeceased by her
parents Syd and Lena Beaumont, brother Roy and sister-in-law Jennie. Left to
mourn her passing are brothers Lorne and Janice, Murray and Audrey, Kevin,
sister-in-law Donna and numerous nieces and nephews.
Donna grew up in
the Gilead district at Hanley. She started out her schooling by taking a horse
and buggy to a one room country school and finishing her schooling riding a
school bus into Hanley. Donna worked in Saskatoon and Calgary before returning
to Hanley and working at Dundurn Military Base. Donna followed that by starting
her own housekeeping business in Hanley. Donna fought a
long battle with Parkinson’s disease and spent her last years in Sunnyside
Adventist Care Centre.
The family would like to
thank the staff at Sunnyside for their care and support. There will be a Family
graveside service on Tuesday April 2, 2019 at the Hanley Community Cemetery. Family
and friends are welcome to a time of lunch and fellowship at the Senior’s
Centre in the Hanley Hall at 2:00 p.m. following the service. Hanson’s Funeral
Home of Davidson in care of arrangements.
It is with great sadness we announce the passing of our mother Doris Stephens on March 26, 2019 after a courageous battle with cancer in Regina, Saskatchewan, at the age of 85. Cherishing her memory are her children Don (Christine), Dan (Rosanne) and Rob (Catherine); eight grandchildren and ten great-grandchildren with the newest great-grandchild due to arrive in April. Welcoming mom with open arms will be her loving husband Brian, as well as her nine predeceased siblings. Mom will be sorely missed by numerous nieces and nephews, brother-in-laws and sister-in-laws and her many friends. A Private Family Interment will be held in Imperial Cemetery at a later date. For online condolences, tributes or to make a donation in her memory to the Activity Department – Long Lake Valley Integrated Facility, Box 180, Imperial, Saskatchewan S0G 2J0 please visit www.fotheringham-mcdougall.com.