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Livestock
Livestock & Forage
Triclabendozole and Fluke
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<blockquote data-quote="bovine" data-source="post: 3351410" data-attributes="member: 12486"><p>[USER=50268]@trewern[/USER] I have a heap of paperwork to do this evening (including my tax return) so don't have time to go into this in detail tonight.</p><p></p><p>1. <strong>stop using bloody combination products. </strong></p><p>2. most people treat at pretty random times for fluke, if relying on products that only kill older stages then you may need to do them more frequently to keep on top of fluke. You also need to look at forecasts and be ahead of things, not wait for bottlejaw. </p><p>3. you are kind of right regarding quarantine and the fact many people buy these fluke in. Also remember that rabbits, deer etc can spread fluke from farm to farm and that includes resistant ones. </p><p></p><p>Lots of people manage well</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bovine, post: 3351410, member: 12486"] [USER=50268]@trewern[/USER] I have a heap of paperwork to do this evening (including my tax return) so don't have time to go into this in detail tonight. 1. [B]stop using bloody combination products. [/B] 2. most people treat at pretty random times for fluke, if relying on products that only kill older stages then you may need to do them more frequently to keep on top of fluke. You also need to look at forecasts and be ahead of things, not wait for bottlejaw. 3. you are kind of right regarding quarantine and the fact many people buy these fluke in. Also remember that rabbits, deer etc can spread fluke from farm to farm and that includes resistant ones. Lots of people manage well [/QUOTE]
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Triclabendozole and Fluke
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