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Livestock & Forage
The happy lambing thread
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<blockquote data-quote="jemski" data-source="post: 3501552" data-attributes="member: 2096"><p>There's always plenty of threads on lambing problems/disasters, so I thought I'd start one on happy lambing stories. </p><p></p><p>Here's mine from today... </p><p></p><p>10 days ago had a ewe with toxaemia. She was stargazing, blind and could only walk backwards. I treated her with calcium and ketol but no improvement by the end of the day. I called the vet for advice, he wanted me to take her in, do a blood glucose test and then give her a steroid to abort the lambs. He wouldn't leave me a steroid without seeing her. she was still bright and alert, and my gut feeling was it was too soon to abort the lambs, but the vet was adamant that she would die if I didn't. After speaking to @sixdogs, who backed up my gut feeling, I decided to just keep treating her. </p><p>She wouldn't eat by herself, but if I put hay and nuts in the side of her mouth she ate them happily. So I spent a fair bit of time that evening doing just that. The next morning she was at the hay rack when I walked in, could see again and walk forwards. After a couple more days she was still bright but not eating cake so I decided to turn her out with the the singles in a paddock by the shed. After a day or so she was pretty much glued to the feed block, and then in the last few days has been so perky I wondered if she had slipped her lambs, or if they had died inside her, as she didn't seem to have got any bigger over the last 10 days. But this morning she had a lovely little twin, and even has a bit of milk. This has made me very happy! [ATTACH=full]473090[/ATTACH]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jemski, post: 3501552, member: 2096"] There's always plenty of threads on lambing problems/disasters, so I thought I'd start one on happy lambing stories. Here's mine from today... 10 days ago had a ewe with toxaemia. She was stargazing, blind and could only walk backwards. I treated her with calcium and ketol but no improvement by the end of the day. I called the vet for advice, he wanted me to take her in, do a blood glucose test and then give her a steroid to abort the lambs. He wouldn't leave me a steroid without seeing her. she was still bright and alert, and my gut feeling was it was too soon to abort the lambs, but the vet was adamant that she would die if I didn't. After speaking to @sixdogs, who backed up my gut feeling, I decided to just keep treating her. She wouldn't eat by herself, but if I put hay and nuts in the side of her mouth she ate them happily. So I spent a fair bit of time that evening doing just that. The next morning she was at the hay rack when I walked in, could see again and walk forwards. After a couple more days she was still bright but not eating cake so I decided to turn her out with the the singles in a paddock by the shed. After a day or so she was pretty much glued to the feed block, and then in the last few days has been so perky I wondered if she had slipped her lambs, or if they had died inside her, as she didn't seem to have got any bigger over the last 10 days. But this morning she had a lovely little twin, and even has a bit of milk. This has made me very happy! [ATTACH=full]473090[/ATTACH] [/QUOTE]
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