Sunday, May 19, 2013

Mustang Sally makes herself over

Mustang Sally is my favorite goat of all times.  She is so good and sweet and never gives me any trouble.  On top of her wonderful personality, she produces lots of milk and has great conformation...she's the whole package. So, I was very disappointed when she aborted in December.  I didn't think she could be bred back before she stopped cycling for the season.  Evidently she had other thoughts.  By March it was obvious that she was, indeed, bred again but I had no clue when to expect babies. 

On May 18 at 8 am when we went out to the barn there was a buck and a doe lying in the straw.  They were still quite goopy and the little doe looked to be minutes old (covered in goop and not yet sitting up).  We took care of business as usual...dipping cords, getting some colostrum and giving mom her bucket of warm molasses water. 

The babies are called Roger Houston and Sharona.  Sharona is the spitting image of her mom so I am thrilled and Houston is the spitting image of his dad with just a little lighter coat.  They are both gorgeous babies and mom is producing like a champ.  After having so many problems with Pims, it is a joy to have Sally make life easy for us.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Lessons in Coccidiosis

My sick doe has recovered and been sick again.  We have decided that she has had two bouts with Coccidia.  Coccidia are a protozoa that can live in the soil and inside your goat's digestive tract.  They are most commonly a problem in baby goats but my farm had no coccidia on it, so my adult goats had never been exposed -- kind of like an adult who gets chicken pox because they never had it as a kid.  The stress of kidding and the increase in feed brought on the first episode and when I moved her to her summer quarters it brought on her second episode.

How did we get it into our herd?  I sent a doe off to be bred and she came back with it.  How do I know this?  Because my doe kidded on the day the bred doe came home and it takes about ten days for the disease to develop.  The bad news is that, now that we have coccidia on our property it will always be here.  The good news is that my doe has made a complete recovery.  Sometimes they don't and can never put on weight or produce well.  She is currently increasing in production and putting on weight!

The treatment I used: sulmet, two tsp in water as a drench for each goat with signs of scours.  Then I used 5 tablespoons to 10 gallons of Sulmet in their drinking water for five days.  My vet says it's important to do the drench right off in case they are so sick that they don't drink the water and to do the five days to catch the protazoa in it's active state...in it's cyst state it is impervious to treatment. Sulmet is very inexpensive and works wonders so I'm keeping it on hand from now on.

Given the prevalence of coccidia...it is everywhere...I am probably lucky to have it on my property because my babies will be exposed to it and won't get sick when they go to their new home...which is likely to have coccidia in the soil.  Who carries the organism?  Dogs, cats, chicken, sheep and even people.  Luckily it only makes animals sick when they are stressed so you know when to look for it.  And have no fear, you can't catch it from your goat because it is species specific which means the kind of coccidia you can get will only be carried by other people.