farmerjan
Herd Master
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2016
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Actually all the animals are not being infected if they are not coming into direct contact with a contaminated source. We never had another sheep test positive for it, we never had any other signs of it in the sheep. And he was a ram we had raised and bred from for 4 years. The vets were totally stumped as to how he wound up with it. That said, the infection nearly always is passed in cattle through a calf sucking a teat that has manure on it where the cow's udder got dirty or direct contamination by say watery manure. And I am assuming that young lambs and kids would get it the same way. It can live for several months outside the body, at least. But, it doesn't usually show up until an animal is older and has a "stress related" occasion, such as a cow calving. For all the studies, it also seems that there are animals that seem to be naturally resistant to it or once it got into a herd it would decimate all the animals.
All that said, we do not regularly test for it. But we also do alot of rotational grazing and the animals do move from place to place. And again, it is partly that people have to stop feeling sorry for any unthrifty animals of any kind and try to save them. There are alot of ways to protect from diseases, and care should be taken to keep animals healthy. I do advocate vaccinating for some of the diseases, but there are some that cannot be vaccinated for. And again, I do not like modified live virus vaccines.
I do not know much about the different diseases that affect goats so won't even attempt to advise there. We do very little vaccination on our sheep either. We do not milk them, and the biggest problems we have is with foot rot and mostly barber pole worms. The problem ones are being weeded out even though we have sacrificed some very productive ewes that have produced some awesome rams with exceptional horns. If they require too much upkeep, they are not making you any money and they are only contributing to a defect that is a continual drain on the overall flock.
All that said, we do not regularly test for it. But we also do alot of rotational grazing and the animals do move from place to place. And again, it is partly that people have to stop feeling sorry for any unthrifty animals of any kind and try to save them. There are alot of ways to protect from diseases, and care should be taken to keep animals healthy. I do advocate vaccinating for some of the diseases, but there are some that cannot be vaccinated for. And again, I do not like modified live virus vaccines.
I do not know much about the different diseases that affect goats so won't even attempt to advise there. We do very little vaccination on our sheep either. We do not milk them, and the biggest problems we have is with foot rot and mostly barber pole worms. The problem ones are being weeded out even though we have sacrificed some very productive ewes that have produced some awesome rams with exceptional horns. If they require too much upkeep, they are not making you any money and they are only contributing to a defect that is a continual drain on the overall flock.