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Livestock
Livestock & Forage
Johnes dilemma
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<blockquote data-quote="Half Pipe" data-source="post: 6181934" data-attributes="member: 45670"><p>This is just my view</p><p>The test results show that cow A is less likely to have gotten jhonnes from its dam, so the risk to cow C depends if the source for cow A was still in the both herd </p><p>When cow C was a calf (highest risk of infection)</p><p>I would kill cow A as soon as possible.</p><p>Preferably straight to abbatoir.</p><p>Like [USER=2681]@Chae1[/USER] said, not fair spreading it thru market etc (someone might think it's a nice cow to add to there herd)</p><p>The longer it's on farm, the more contaminated muck produced and they can loose condition fairly quick.</p><p>Have another source of colostrum available for cow A's calf and don't let it feed from her.</p><p> Colostrum and muck from positive cows are main source</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Half Pipe, post: 6181934, member: 45670"] This is just my view The test results show that cow A is less likely to have gotten jhonnes from its dam, so the risk to cow C depends if the source for cow A was still in the both herd When cow C was a calf (highest risk of infection) I would kill cow A as soon as possible. Preferably straight to abbatoir. Like [USER=2681]@Chae1[/USER] said, not fair spreading it thru market etc (someone might think it's a nice cow to add to there herd) The longer it's on farm, the more contaminated muck produced and they can loose condition fairly quick. Have another source of colostrum available for cow A's calf and don't let it feed from her. Colostrum and muck from positive cows are main source [/QUOTE]
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Johnes dilemma
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