Guinness World Records and Ripley’s Believe It or Not arrived on Davidson on March 25th to certify the birth of a three-headed calf. The tricephalic red angus cross calf was born at 2 a.m. on Gordon Willner’s farm west of Davidson. The weight was 113 pounds. It had been just another day on the farm during calving season before to the historic event. The cow was being observed because she was about to calve. As her due date approached, it became evident that the birth would not happen as anticipated. Willner, alarmed, inserted his arm inside the cow and felt one, then two heads. He asked for help, figuring it was a pair of twins.
3 Headed Calf Was Born In Saskatchewan
Dr. Olaf Lipro, a big animal veterinary medicine resident at the University of Saskatchewan, responded to the need for help. He arrived at the property and investigated, determining that two heads were present. After the delivery did not progress, he decided to perform a s section. It was Lipro’s first time executing a C-s on a cow. He mentioned that he performed one around three weeks ago on a pug who was unable to give birth to her pug/Rottweiler babies. “That went really well,” Lipro said, “so I figured pulling these twins out of Gord’s cow should be a piece of cake.”
Dr. Olaf Lipro, a big animal veterinary medicine resident at the University of Saskatchewan, responded to the need for help. He arrived at the property and investigated, determining that two heads were present. After the delivery did not progress, he decided to do an emergency cesarean section. Lipro was doing an emergency C-section on a cow for the first time. He mentioned that he performed one around three weeks ago on a pug who was unable to give birth to her pug/Rottweiler babies. “That went really well,” Lipro said, “so I figured pulling these twins out of Gord’s cow should be a piece of cake.”
“I was totally gob smacked,” Lipro elaborated. He’d seen two-headed calves before, but never a three-headed calf, he stated. His first instinct, he said, was to get out his iPhone and post it on social media. Then he remembered he had to get back to work. He examined all three of the calf’s airways to ensure that it could breathe. One of the heads, the central one, seemed to be in pain. According to Lipro, he had to remove the amniotic fluid out of the animal’s nose. Others use a piece of straw, but Lipro claims to have discovered a new approach. He claims to suck the bothersome fluid out of his nostrils with the straw from a Tim Hortons Iced Capp.