Onyx
Ridin' The Range
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2015
- Messages
- 65
- Reaction score
- 43
- Points
- 53
It's a real conundrum for me too.
It reminds me of when I got into rabbits and was told, matter of factly, that I had to tattoo my animals. There was simply no choice in the matter if I wanted to show rabbits. After seeing this done I was horrified. The process was brutal and the animals scream and struggle.
I went along with it even though I never felt it was right. I started going to someone who used a tattoo pen as soon as such things became available. This is a much gentler way to tattoo. Afterward I felt ashamed. I thought, all these years I went with the flow even though I knew it was hurting my rabbits... now that I don't have to do that anymore, the blinders have fallen off my eyes because accepting that it's something I don't think is right, no longer has any negative consequences for me. Now I'm not saying that everyone who tattoos their rabbits this way are horrible people or anything like that, just that for ME, I allowed convenience to dictate my actions instead of what I felt was right.
I want to make sure that if I decide to disbud, it's for the right reasons and not just because I feel pressured into it by convenience, or what is considered to be acceptable by others.
If I do opt to debud it definitely won't be done without some kind of sedative. I don't believe a topical anesthetic would be of much use in this case to be honest. I am wondering if it's possible to have the vet administer a sedative and then do it myself with icing in between each application or if I could have a vet do it this way. I don't want scurs! I am concerned with the possibility of goats getting stuck on fences, etc due to their horns though. I have had a tragic experience with another animal with this and so it's a very sensitive subject for me. I definitely believe that enduring some pain is better than being strangled to death on a fence. I would also feel responsible if I did not debud and I had a goat injure another goat with their horns.
It reminds me of when I got into rabbits and was told, matter of factly, that I had to tattoo my animals. There was simply no choice in the matter if I wanted to show rabbits. After seeing this done I was horrified. The process was brutal and the animals scream and struggle.
I went along with it even though I never felt it was right. I started going to someone who used a tattoo pen as soon as such things became available. This is a much gentler way to tattoo. Afterward I felt ashamed. I thought, all these years I went with the flow even though I knew it was hurting my rabbits... now that I don't have to do that anymore, the blinders have fallen off my eyes because accepting that it's something I don't think is right, no longer has any negative consequences for me. Now I'm not saying that everyone who tattoos their rabbits this way are horrible people or anything like that, just that for ME, I allowed convenience to dictate my actions instead of what I felt was right.
I want to make sure that if I decide to disbud, it's for the right reasons and not just because I feel pressured into it by convenience, or what is considered to be acceptable by others.
If I do opt to debud it definitely won't be done without some kind of sedative. I don't believe a topical anesthetic would be of much use in this case to be honest. I am wondering if it's possible to have the vet administer a sedative and then do it myself with icing in between each application or if I could have a vet do it this way. I don't want scurs! I am concerned with the possibility of goats getting stuck on fences, etc due to their horns though. I have had a tragic experience with another animal with this and so it's a very sensitive subject for me. I definitely believe that enduring some pain is better than being strangled to death on a fence. I would also feel responsible if I did not debud and I had a goat injure another goat with their horns.