He receives his first antibodies from his mother, not in the womb, but only after he has nursed from her and consumed a substance called colostrum, which her body produces just for that first meal.
These nutrients are crucial, and, without his mother’s help, the fragile newborn faces disease and death. It was in this tenuous condition that Ari was found.
Ari was born at a “cull sale.” Dairy cows, who produce milk only when they have been impregnated, are subjected to a relentless cycle of gestation, birth, and insemination until their bodies are worn out. At four or five years old, these “spent” cows are brought to auction and sold for cheap beef, often limping in pain from hip bones that have begun to deteriorate and overgrown hooves that have never been trimmed. They are frequently suffering from a variety of other health issues, as well.
Ari’s mother gave birth in one such sale house. Workers promptly drove her to the auction floor before she even had a chance to clean her newborn. Ari, only minutes old, was left on the floor to die.
This situation is common. Many cows are pregnant when they are taken to cull sales, and some give birth there. In Ari’s case, however, an uncommon act of kindness prevented a grim outcome that day.