- Thread starter
- #11
Pioneer Chicken
True BYH Addict
Thank y'all for your replies! We have still have not found owners. The folks we contacted were not able to locate any owners under the tag unfortunately.
Today was the first day she came down to the fence- I think she knows my routine now! - and waited while I refilled hay and fed and watered my goats. I gave her some hay and when I came back out from the goat barn, she was happily munching on the hay. I think she did not eat due to stress yesterday or the day before. Will be picking up an all stock pellet for her this morning.
I think I was wrong that she is in labor. I think she is close though. I know this is probably a dumb question but I'm trying to cover the bases: if she had lambed before escaping, would she have leakage and blood like goats do? When we caught her, I milked her a little to see what came out and it was colostrum, not milk. I am still keeping my eye on her. I originally thought she was in labor because (if sheep have ligaments like goats) her ligaments were gone and her rump was a little arched. No other signs such as pawing, mucous plug or discomfort.
ETA: Her sides are sunk in too; however, it looks like her belly is low if that makes sense. Kind of like when my goats went into labor- their sides sunk and bellies dropped.
Today was the first day she came down to the fence- I think she knows my routine now! - and waited while I refilled hay and fed and watered my goats. I gave her some hay and when I came back out from the goat barn, she was happily munching on the hay. I think she did not eat due to stress yesterday or the day before. Will be picking up an all stock pellet for her this morning.
I think I was wrong that she is in labor. I think she is close though. I know this is probably a dumb question but I'm trying to cover the bases: if she had lambed before escaping, would she have leakage and blood like goats do? When we caught her, I milked her a little to see what came out and it was colostrum, not milk. I am still keeping my eye on her. I originally thought she was in labor because (if sheep have ligaments like goats) her ligaments were gone and her rump was a little arched. No other signs such as pawing, mucous plug or discomfort.
ETA: Her sides are sunk in too; however, it looks like her belly is low if that makes sense. Kind of like when my goats went into labor- their sides sunk and bellies dropped.