Beekissed
Herd Master
I'll add that even with natural antihelmintics worming on a schedule and using the same concoction all the time will just breed worms that have become resistant to what you are using...in other words, you are breeding a better worm but not doing so much for the goat.
A lot of folks think that herbal dewormer concoctions will be the final solution but any time one is raising animals, it really needs to be combined with other ways of insuring flock health~ culling for hardiness and parasite resistance, breeding for resistance, rotating pasture or giving enough pasture that they aren't always feeding over their own feces.
Switch things up, especially if you are going the organic route. Put some ground ginger root in her feed for a few days and, if you can find some, use a good kelp meal/salt mineral supplement.
She could need extra selenium...a cheap way to get that into the animal is to feed a little BOSS in her daily ration.
A lot of folks think that herbal dewormer concoctions will be the final solution but any time one is raising animals, it really needs to be combined with other ways of insuring flock health~ culling for hardiness and parasite resistance, breeding for resistance, rotating pasture or giving enough pasture that they aren't always feeding over their own feces.
Switch things up, especially if you are going the organic route. Put some ground ginger root in her feed for a few days and, if you can find some, use a good kelp meal/salt mineral supplement.
Some of the more common reasons kelp is used for livestock include:
What it contains
- Enhancing immune function
- Increasing meat quality
- Reversing depressed immune function
- Reducing the stress associated with weaning
- Weight gain
- Calcium
- Copper
- Dietary Sodium
- Fiber
- Folate
- Iodine
- Iron
- Magnesium
- Manganese
- Pantothenic Acid
- Riboflavin
- Vitamin C
- Vitamin K
- Zinc
She could need extra selenium...a cheap way to get that into the animal is to feed a little BOSS in her daily ration.