Ewe lamb sudden death

jambi1214

Loving the herd life
Joined
Feb 11, 2021
Messages
221
Reaction score
428
Points
163
Location
Southeast Missouri
I think I'm gonna continue to hand pick the perilla plants I see out and put boys.back in this area.the next few days. I don't have extra pasture or area for them and they are currently in my back yard but no much left for them to get eat. Will not use Roundup anymore although I did use it around electric fencing....but with cancer concern I need another product! In spring or whenever pastures are prepped I will get someone out to spray I guess the whole pasture.
 

Baymule

Herd Master
Joined
Aug 22, 2010
Messages
36,060
Reaction score
112,132
Points
893
Location
East Texas
I started a plant I.D. Thread. My I-phone had a button at the bottom of a picture that identifies plants and animals. Not 100%, but close. Feel free to add pictures and identification!

 

SageHill

Herd Master
Joined
Aug 27, 2022
Messages
4,504
Reaction score
17,049
Points
553
Location
Southern CA
I had oaks all over the property in Lindale. When I let the sheep in the yard to graze, they ran to their favorite tree to scarf up all the acorns. None had any ill effects. Maybe because they ate a variety of other plants, the acorns didn’t bother them.
I think you're right. Especially after all I've been reading lately. The ones that had issues were new here, probably ate too many "candy" acorns. I'll find out soon if they learned their lesson - acorns are starting to fall!
 

Baymule

Herd Master
Joined
Aug 22, 2010
Messages
36,060
Reaction score
112,132
Points
893
Location
East Texas
I had a horse lose a couple hundred pounds, nothing worked, he was wormed, gave extra feed, still skinny. I finally caught on. Found him standing under a big white oak tree, just standing. An acorn fell and he went over and ate it. He was literally waiting on acorns to fall! Goofball. Between him and the deer eating the acorns and end of the season, he finally gained his weight back.
 

Finnie

Herd Master
Joined
May 6, 2017
Messages
1,355
Reaction score
3,995
Points
343
Location
Hamilton County, north of Indianapolis
I had a horse lose a couple hundred pounds, nothing worked, he was wormed, gave extra feed, still skinny. I finally caught on. Found him standing under a big white oak tree, just standing. An acorn fell and he went over and ate it. He was literally waiting on acorns to fall! Goofball. Between him and the deer eating the acorns and end of the season, he finally gained his weight back.
Was it a problem with the acorns causing him to lose weight? Or the fact that all the time he was standing there waiting, he wasn’t grazing?
 

Ridgetop

Herd Master
Joined
Mar 13, 2015
Messages
7,431
Reaction score
26,059
Points
743
Location
Shadow Hills, CA
Will not use Roundup anymore although I did use it around electric fencing....but with cancer concern I need another product! In spring or whenever pastures are prepped I will get someone out to spray I guess the whole pasture.
Grazeon is safe for livestock but check Farmerjan's thread about it since it stays in the system for 12-18 months. I don't think you can butcher animals within that time. Check with Farmerjan and Baymule - she is spraying fencerows to put up pasture fence.

Eating the acorns. Acorns will make cattle lose weight too.
So will very high protein hay. We were feeding first and second cutting alfalfa to our dairy goats for higher milk yields. Super high protein - great for milk yield. We bought it by the field and had it delivered as we needed it. We fed it to our horses since it was what we had. Our two older horses both lost a lot of weight. They were really energetic and happy but looking thin.

I was livestock leader for our 4-H club at the time and while preparing for one of my meetings on how to feed market animals, both for gaining weight and holding them back, I suddenly realized that that high protein hay was keeping them from gaining weight no matter how much extra we fed. Took them off the good stuff and put them on lower quality hay and they started to fill out again. DUH!
 

Baymule

Herd Master
Joined
Aug 22, 2010
Messages
36,060
Reaction score
112,132
Points
893
Location
East Texas
Grazon stays in the soil up to 18 months, not in the animal. Grazon kills broadleaf plants. I would suggest spot spraying the Perilla so you don’t kill off the “good “ weeds and forbs the sheep love to eat.
 
Top