CALF CADDY
The Calf Caddy
- A one man way to move a cow/calf pair
- Will clamp on any 1 7/8" or 2" ball
- Can be mounted directly to the bumper of the pickup or you can put a ball on the drawbar of your tractor
- Will clamp on or disconnect off the ball as fast as you can open a pair of visegrips
- Plastic protects the umbilical cord from freezing to the steel
- Easier to tag, vaccinate, and give boluses standing up, not kneeling down trying to hold the calf
- The calf can be loaded with ease. You don't have to hold the calf up, his legs can be positioned after he is set in the caddy
- The cow will follow because it looks like the calf is standing up
- You can carry the calf & caddy easier than you can carry a calf alone, because you have handles to carry at waist level, not chest high


- The same Calf-Caddy that is used on the bumper, is also used on the skid
- The skid may be pulled by horse, pickup, 4-wheeler, tractor or by hand
- Smoothest way to transport calves
- Very stable even on rough ground
- Designed to glide across corn rows
- It doesn't bounce when hitting frozen objects, like a wheel would
- Can be pulled on any terrain, snow, dirt, mud
- All rounded corners to pull around and over obstacles, like corner posts or clumps of hay
- It can be pulled with a chain or lariat
Calf-Caddy Skid
Nursing Arm
- The same Calf-Caddy that is used on the bumper, is also used on the Nursing Arm
- It holds the calf in a standing position so that you have both hands free to get the calf started sucking
- It can hold the calf in a half standing position, with his legs folded under so he is at the right height to the cow's udder
- If the cow kicks, the calf won't go down and get stepped on, just swing the calf back out of the way
- The cow will stand calmer because you're not struggling to get the calf to suck
- Just pull the pin to detach the arm from the headgate to work cattle
