Re: [Blackbelly] Blackbelly Digest, Vol 4, Issue 101

2008-08-18 Thread Nancy Tom Richardson
Hello, We use cattle cydectin not sheep. Our vet says that the sheep isn't 
strong enough. Use the cattle orally at a rate of 1 cc per 20 pounds. This 
give 2 .5  of wormer where the other is only 1 per 11 pounds. It has worked 
great for us the past couple of years. - We did use the sheep and lost a few 
to worms even when they had been wormed good at its called for dosage.. - 
Cattle seems to also be cheaper to use which really helps. This is just my 2 
cents can't say if it will work for you. We also use it when pregnant at 
anytime. Nancy
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Subject: Blackbelly Digest, Vol 4, Issue 101


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I understand that cydectin is not recommended if they are pregnant. Also I 
understand that cydectin is the last resource after other dewormers proved 
not to be effective.  For sure the new animals bring to much worms or new 
worms that the other animals were not exposed in so much quantity.  A good 
idea would be to check with they former owner to see what dewormer they 
were using and how frequently they used and that would give an idea if the 
worm would be resistant to that dewormer, in that case you would need to 
use a different type.


Have a great day!!!

Andy


The biggest mistake people make in life is not making a living at doing 
what they most enjoy.

- Malcolm S. Forbes (1919-1990)


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--- On Mon, 8/18/08, Onalee Israel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


From: Onalee Israel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Blackbelly] Wasting Away
To: blackbelly@lists.blackbellysheep.info
Date: Monday, August 18, 2008, 3:39 PM
Have you wormed your sheep?  If not, then I would suggest
using either
Cydectin or Ivomec (I have had no luck with Safegaurd,
it's a waste of time
and money).  This should be done immediately and may need
to be repeated in
2 weeks and then on a regular basis.  Giving them an Iron
supplement and
B-12 would be a big help, too.

Onalee


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Message: 7
Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2008 13:02:19 -0700 (PDT)
From: AP [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Blackbelly] Wasting Away
To: blackbelly@lists.blackbellysheep.info
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Can you give some details about the dieing process of the animals?  That 
would help.


Have a great day!!!

Andy


The biggest mistake people make in life is not making a living at doing 
what they most enjoy.

- Malcolm S. Forbes (1919-1990)


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--- On Mon, 8/18/08, helen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


From: helen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Blackbelly] Wasting Away
To: blackbelly@lists.blackbellysheep.info
Date: Monday, August 18, 2008, 3:54 PM
I'm a firm believer in Nutri-Drench. I use it anytime I
see my sheep acting
puny. For whatever ails them, this is a good step. What is
growing in your
pasture? Check for any of the poison plants, check feces
for worms, check
for ticks on their skin, especially around the barest
areas, ie; udder
scrotom, ears, inside and out. We are overloaded with
turkey mite this year
and have fed DE to help with worms also. So many things can
be wrong and go
unnoticed without close examination. Good luck. ( We dose
our sheep with the
nutri-drench 2x's a day and really pump it up when ours
get sick.) Thank
goodness that doesn't happen often.
Helen

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Message: 8
Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2008 16:17:18 -0400
From: Pantalone, John A \(GE Infra, Energy\) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Blackbelly] Wasting Away
To: 

Re: [Blackbelly] Blackbelly Digest, Vol 4, Issue 101

2008-08-18 Thread Tracy Wessel
John,
I lost one weather in Southern CA to what several sheep folks, including the 
Cal Poly sheep manager, felt was Johne's. He wasted for more than a couple 
weeks. Maybe months. He was several years old. I was the caretaker and couldn't 
get the owner to euthanize. Came from an original flock in the high desert area.

Since moving to Oregon, I've had good luck with my Blackbellys until recently. 
This Winter I had several sheep get sore behind. I assumed it was the doing of 
King Henry, my ram now in the freezer :0. Then I notice one ewe began to lay 
down a lot, and finally had what looked like pink eye in one eye. I hit her 
with LA200. Several folks suggested coccidia. This ewe came to me about 6 
months prior to falling ill so anything my sheep could have been carriers I 
suppose. In any case, the ewe recovered, lambed, then 3 weeks later, died after 
several days of wasting and appearing to stagger and be drunk. I did try the 
LA200 but too late. I was okay with it until I cam home and found her twin 
lambs, who had kept away from her for several days of their accord, lying with 
her body. She'd been alive that morning, but failing. That just broke my heart. 
Nobody else appeared to fall ill. Possible she could have retained a placenta 
or gotten an infection from lambing, but there was no discharge or smell.

When I had my sheep in Amity they thrived. Over the last year, I've had them 
back in Boring where they originated, I have had the problems, such as this 
one, lameness behind (still assuming it was the ram) and then my one ewe that 
gets sick every Spring. i.e. The farm had sheep on it years back.. don't know 
what kind or how long ago. Each year there were a few sheep here that got 
scours and got really thin. The vet felt that those individuals were eating a 
toxic plant (something yellow, like Buttercup). Other cattle/sheep people I 
talk to feel that some sheep just can't handle the Spring grass. I have one ewe 
that just gets sickly each Spring and I keep thinking I'll butcher her. But 
this year after the grass died, she started laying down a lot. I was going to 
hit her with LA200 and was concerned she'd fallen to the same fate as the one 
that died. But she's suddenly appearing better, and has recovered her weight 
and no longer has scours (until next Spring, unless the new prop
 erty they are going to has a more agreeable pasture).

Which by the way... I couldn't get the sheep on the stock trailer. Anyone in my 
area willing to come help? Neither of my dogs could do better than getting them 
to stand in front of the trailer door and any further pushing only created 
chaos. Tried grain. Would appreciate the help. I'm in Boring, OR

Re the vet fee what you might do in the future if you lose one is get it to the 
vet school right away for a necropsy. The previous owner of my sheep had a ewe 
and two lambs drop dead and she did that... they suspected digitalis which does 
grow here.

Tracy


Message: 8
Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2008 16:17:18 -0400
From: Pantalone, John A \(GE Infra, Energy\) [EMAIL PROTECTED]

I originally suspected Johne's Disease, but the latest victim is only
6months old (I think that would rule out OPP as well).  My understanding
is that JD takes several years to manifest.

Worming:
Poisons:
I may have to bite the bullet and take it to the vet...

I have had 3 sheep in the last two months die from progressively wasting
away.  From the moment I notice thin ribs and hips, it takes about 1-2
weeks for them to die.  I noticed another one today and am at a loss.  I
have tried administering antibiotics (LA200 and B12), but they seem to
die within a day or two anyway.

From: Dayna Denmark [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Just reading up on Coccidia. Could be another possibility given the age of the 
sheep and the weather you have been experiencing.


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Re: [Blackbelly] Blackbelly Digest, Vol 4, Issue 101 Re: Wasting Away

2008-08-18 Thread Mark Fleming
My vet always has me to worm first with cydectin.  His concern is the barber
pole worm.  I only have to worm maybe twice a year.  I have never had a
problem with the cydectin and the pregnant ewes.  Valbazen has been the vets
choice for other types of worms such as the flat worms.  Our floating fecal
have been excellent each month.  Good luck! 

Mark Fleming
Lamar, Missouri

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Today's Topics:

   1. Wasting Away (Pantalone, John A (GE Infra, Energy))
   2. Re: Wasting Away (AP)
   3. Re: Wasting Away (Onalee Israel)
   4. Re: wasting away (Dayna Denmark)
   5. Re: Wasting Away (helen)
   6. Re: Wasting Away (AP)
   7. Re: Wasting Away (AP)
   8. Re: Wasting Away (Pantalone, John A (GE Infra, Energy))
   9. Re: wasting away (Dayna Denmark)


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Message: 1
Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2008 13:41:02 -0400
From: Pantalone, John A \(GE Infra, Energy\) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Blackbelly] Wasting Away
To: blackbelly@lists.blackbellysheep.info
Message-ID:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Content-Type: text/plain;   charset=us-ascii

I have had 3 sheep in the last two months die from progressively wasting
away.  From the moment I notice thin ribs and hips, it takes about 1-2
weeks for them to die.  I noticed another one today and am at a loss.  I
have tried administering antibiotics (LA200 and B12), but they seem to
die within a day or two anyway.

These sheep have been with me for a few years (or born here), however, I
have recently (about 4mths ago) introduced several Royal White Sheep to
my flock.  The mature Royal Whites had scrapies ear tags.  My original
flock had never been tested.  They all eat grass regularly (with a bit
of grain) and get minerals.

Anybody have any ideas?

John


--

Message: 2
Date: Mon, 18 Aug 2008 12:07:59 -0700 (PDT)
From: AP [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Blackbelly] Wasting Away
To: blackbelly@lists.blackbellysheep.info
Message-ID: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

You need to check the lower eyelid of your animals to look for signs of
anemia, if they have anemia then you need to use dewormer as soon as
posible.  I have good experience using garlic juice, and oregano to help the
dewormer.  Normally I gave 2 or 3 cc orally of garlic juice.  You would find
garlic juice and oregano at the supermarket.  Other people recommend the use
of parsley too.  

Have a great day!!!

Andy



The biggest mistake people make in life is not making a living at doing what
they most enjoy.
- Malcolm S. Forbes (1919-1990)
 

...
Notice: This email message and any attachments are confidential,
intended only for the named recipient(s) and may contain information that is
privileged or exempt from disclosure under applicable law. If you are not
the intended recipient(s), you are notified that the dissemination,
distribution or copying of this message is strictly prohibited. If you are
not the intended recipient, please immediately reply to the sender and
delete the message from your email system. Thank you.


--- On Mon, 8/18/08, Pantalone, John A (GE Infra, Energy)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 From: Pantalone, John A (GE Infra, Energy) [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [Blackbelly] Wasting Away
 To: blackbelly@lists.blackbellysheep.info
 Date: Monday, August 18, 2008, 1:41 PM
 I have had 3 sheep in the last two months die from
 progressively wasting
 away.  From the moment I notice thin ribs and hips, it
 takes about 1-2
 weeks for them to die.  I noticed another one today and am
 at a loss.  I
 have tried administering antibiotics (LA200 and B12), but
 they seem to
 die within a day or two anyway.
 
 These sheep have been with me for a few years (or born
 here), however, I
 have recently (about 4mths ago) introduced several Royal
 White Sheep to
 my flock.  The mature Royal Whites had scrapies ear tags. 
 My original
 flock had never been tested.  They all eat grass regularly
 (with a bit
 of grain) and get minerals.
 
 Anybody have any ideas?
 
 John
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