Six male Holstein calves, several just days old, had been abandoned without food or water and left for dead. Some were tied to a tractor; others were shut in a garage. As male offspring of dairy cows are considered to be of little to no value to the industry, they are often killed shortly after birth or sold to be raised for veal or beef. These six helpless babies had been discarded like trash, and their lives hung in the balance.
After learning about the suffering calves, Farm Sanctuary immediately launched a rescue effort, and staff drove to pick up the calves halfway between the Pennsylvania farm and our New York Shelter. The calves we greeted were a terrible sight. Their eyes were sunken in from severe dehydration, and they were pale, coughing and extremely weak. They were fighting life-threatening infections, and most were unable to stand on their own. Four of the calves weighed less than they would have at birth, and their prognosis looked grim. Medical care was urgently needed to stabilize the calves, so our rescue team rushed them to the Cornell University Hospital for Animals for critical emergency care.
The following weeks were filled with constant care and anxious waiting as these sickly calves struggled to become well. But slowly, their fragile, battered bodies began to heal, and, in time, each came home from the hospital.