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GoatCrazyLady
Ridin' The Range
Thank you for your help
All are doing fine except for my alpine. He got it the worst! Face is swollen still but his berries are getting better, he is eating and drinking fine but can tell he's not his normal self. checked his gums and they look pink to me. I placed an order for the pig iron and copasure from the website u gave me and also vitamin B complex. I'm going to call the feed store and see if they carry the pig iron so I can give ASAP.20kidsonhill said:Pig iron is sold either at Jeffers or valleyvet on-line or some feed stores may carry it. If they are anemic(gums look white) and have bottle jaw, then pig iron would be the first thin that you would want to consider. or perhaps another form of iron would be Red cell for horses. REd cell for horses is given orally, pig iron is injected. The pig iron will work faster and better, because it is injected. Red cell for horses is also sold at your local feed stores, normally in a gallon, but I have seen it sold in smaller amounts.
Around $22.00 for a gallon of red cell, get the smaller bottle if they have it.
or get a 100 ml bottle of Iron Ferrous 100, which is the pig iron.
Copasure is copper oxide rods and they are given orally and lay in the stomach lining of the goat, Barberpole worms(heamonchous) do not like copper oxide and it will help some. But is not going to get rid of them completely.
How are they doing?
How are the treatments going?
Did you check their gums? Did they look anemic?
I have never had a goat with Bottle Jaw that wasn't very anemic. Are you sure he isn't anemic looking and you are just being confussed by skin pigmentation? Bottle Jaw is caused from anemia. Giving him 1 or 2 cc of pig iron isn't going to hurt anything if he isn't truely anemic. But I am a little confused why he would have bottle jaw.GoatCrazyLady said:If his gums are not white do I still want to give the pig iron?