<< My dog ingested just a small flower from a very small azalea and was near death in 30 min. Please be very careful and look up azaleas on the Internet and there you will see why they are so deadly. We pulled up all of ours as our dear pet came within seconds of death, thankfully is well now. Peggy H. >>
Glad to read your pet survived the ordeal, Peggy! Once the grazing pasture fence is up I've been thinking it's best to keep them out of the backyard and just let the ducks in to bug eat and clean the ditch. That way the sheep can graze I can still watch from a distance and can remove the screen and fencing off my plants. ;-) Besides, I have just started a raised bed for herbs and the ram kept rooting in that soil....just one more thing I'd have to keep them from chowing on. I shared the posts with dh yesterday....he gets the picture. The ram is not a pet and stop feeding him by hand(that is what made the ram get less fearful, imo), as well as leave his face and horns alone, unless you want to be his ramming post or have to put him in the freezer locker. ;-) Diana Ram still hasn't managed to get the ewes to participate in breeding....he tries, they squat and run. :/ =============================================== This message is from the Barbados Blackbelly Sheep mailing list (http://www.awrittenword.com/listserv/index.html). To respond to this message, send e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe or change your membership options, go to http://lists.coyotenet.net/mailman/listinfo/blackbelly To search the archives, go to http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
