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Please Help - 2 Day Old Orphan Donkey Baby

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  • Please Help - 2 Day Old Orphan Donkey Baby

    I cross posted this on the Breeding Forum, but need some advice rather quickly so needed some more exposure.

    I work part time at a donkey rescue. Our local feedlot broker is on his way back from a Kansas auction with a truckload of donkeys, including a 2 day old baby with no mother. He will be arriving at 7PM mtn time.

    We have a jennet that just started weaning from her foal two days ago. Ideally, we could get her to accept the baby to nurse. Any ideas?
    "Crazy is just another point of view" Sonia Dada

  • #2
    I'm sorry I don't have any advice (although he certainly needs a nursemare), but I can offer jingles and best wishes for all the best. Poor, poor baby.

    Comment


    • #3
      Can you buy clostrum?
      What does your vet say?

      Jingles for the baby.
      What happened to this poor baby's mother? This is tragic.
      save lives...spay/neuter/geld

      Comment


      • #4
        It just depends on the jennet and if she wants the newborn. I know with cattle there are topicals put on orphans to assist the cow in taking in the lil one.

        I'm in eastern KS and would have taken that orphan donkey off your hands in a nanno second. Darn it!!! Good luck with the lil one.

        Comment


        • #5
          Contact

          Please contact Alyssa at Info4Rersi@aol.com - she has raised orphans with excellent success. One particular orphan was a TB colt who was a twin - he had quite an array of issues going on and he's now going on 2. Strapping young gelding with a heart of gold who has successfully overcome all of the odds stacked against him from birth. She is also a donkey lover

          I hope everything works out - my heart is breaking just thinking about that poor little one without his/her momma.

          Please keep us posted!

          Comment

          • Original Poster

            #6
            Sadly, the baby passed before the broker even made it home. He had the baby in his cab with him since it's cold and damp in Colorado today.

            The story is that the jennet and baby were brought to the auction, but mama wasn't producing any milk. The broker said he would bring him back to us so we could try to help.

            We did go ahead and buy 8 donkeys from him that he obtained at the auction. There are several young ones and one that looks pregnant. We'll focus our efforts on them.

            Thank you all for the words of encouragement.
            "Crazy is just another point of view" Sonia Dada

            Comment


            • #7
              Well, bless the broker for giving the lil guy a half a chance and I hope the former owner who sent them to auction sits down in a thick patch of chiggers.

              Comment


              • #8
                Condolences to all of you.
                Good deed that broker did. I was worried when you said he was being hauled back from the auction in case he was in the trailer with all the other donkeys.
                What a good guy to let him ride up front.
                Ditto what SLW said about the jerk that sent them to auction...although I don't know what chiggers are, but I get the idea.
                save lives...spay/neuter/geld

                Comment


                • #9
                  May the little one have a safe journey over the Rainbow Bridge. Perhaps he/she crossed with the two-day old filly a friend lost last night. The driver deserves a special place in Heaven for caring for the foal in its final hours.

                  Originally posted by fivehorses View Post
                  ...although I don't know what chiggers are, but I get the idea.
                  They're one of life's little experiences you're better off without, especially in the places they are wont to infest!
                  The inherent vice of Capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings. The inherent virtue of Socialism is the equal sharing of miseries.
                  Winston Churchill

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    So sad to hear the baby didn't make it. How very sad....

                    For future reference, we have had luck two different times with getting mares to take orphans foals. Both situations, the mare was nursing a foal already. One nursed both at once as they were the same age. The other was about to wean and took the younger orphan on right as older baby was weaning off.

                    How did we get them to take? We had 24 hours notice in both situations. We immediately put a blanket (one wore a sweatshirt) on the mare's babies. When the new babies arrived, we moved the horseware from mama's babies to the orphans. Along with careful introduction and monitoring, the mares were more accepting of the babies because they "smelled" like their own babies.

                    Both mares were good mamas and took easily to the process. The younger baby of the two orphans went to the mama who was ready to wean so she didn't have to fight an older foal for a teet. The older orphan was the hardest to adapt as he was not as interested in the new mama. In fact, I think he was very confused because he was 6 weeks when his mom colicked and passed. He morned for his mama for at least two weeks. It was sad but he finally came around and enjoyed growing up with his "brother".

                    And the mare that nursed the younger baby alone, actually had a tougher time weaning from that one versus her own baby!
                    ...don't sh** where you eat...

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      What a heartbreaking story, but the driver sounds like a good guy to try and help the little fella. Poor baby. What happened to his Mother? Maybe I don't want to know.

                      It is very kind of you to help the others. I have had donkeys for 25 years. They are highly intelligent and have deep emotions. I wish you the best with the gang.

                      Comment

                      • Original Poster

                        #12
                        Thank you all. The broker is a good guy. And he doesn't grossly upcharge us simply because we're a rescue like some other brokers tend to do.

                        The mother is still in Kansas. He is going back later this week to pick up more horses and plans to bring her back then. We'll get her too, along with 2 or 3 others that he bought. He didn't have enough room in the semi for all of them last night.

                        That means 3 new donkeys on Friday, 8 on Saturday plus however many more he brings back this week! Who needs some donkeys to adopt?
                        "Crazy is just another point of view" Sonia Dada

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Very sad about the baby, but kudos to the driver as others said.

                          I've got 4 donks so can't help tangibly, but do wish you luck with all the newcomers!
                          www.moranequinephoto.com
                          "If I am fool, it is, at least, a doubting one; and I envy no one the certainty of his self-approved wisdom."
                          Byron

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