Hi Sandy, 

I had the opposite problem.  I had a little ram lamb that wanted mama 
desperately and mama only had eyes for his twin sister.  I put them together, 
and she totally ignored him.  It got to the point, where he started looking 
hunched over and very thin, so I decided just to bottle feed him.  This little 
ram lamb was supposedly a cross from my AB ram that got loose, so i had him 
castrated.  If I had waited another day or two he would have died.  He didn't 
drink much at first, but after he got his appetite and realized that he was 
getting to eat, he came a running.  To this day, he is the only one out of 4 
ram lambs that were born that did not develop even a hint of scurs and he is 
THE MOST BEAUTIFUL LAMB!!  I really wish now that I had had him DNA tested 
against my BB ram.  But if you are in doubt and want him to live, bottle feed 
him.  

I hope everything else is going well.  This should be the worst of your issues 
along this road.  

Nancy

On Sep 22, 2013, at 3:24 PM, SHession wrote:

> I have a ram lamb that was born last Saturday (Sept 14).  From the beginning 
> he wasn't right.  He was born in the barn sometime between 2 AM and 7AM.  
> When I found him he was dried off, but had managed to get in behind the 
> lambing jug, and was stuck back there, inaccessible to Mom.  I got him out 
> and put him and the ewe in the jug.  Within the hour he had gotten hung up 
> between the bottom two boards of the jug, and in the bail of the water 
> bucket.  He had a good suckle reflex, but lacked the reflex to try and find 
> the teat.  I milked ewe and got some colostrum into him.
> 
> I have continued to bottle feed him small quantities of colostrum, and now 
> goat's milk, while leaving him with his mother.  She has been wonderful and 
> attentive, and very cooperative, letting me milk her and also hold him on her 
> teats.  I have squirted milk in his mouth from her teat.  Still can't get him 
> to nurse.
> 
> Up until today he was only taking one or two ounces of milk from the bottle 
> two or three times daily.  I still have to pry his mouth open to get the 
> nipple in.  I was hoping that he would get hungry enough to figure out the 
> real milk source.
> 
> About an hour ago I went into the barn and Mom leaped out to the jug.  I 
> tried letting him outside with her under supervision, but he  just wandered 
> off, and didn't respond to her calls.  He did urinate, which surprised me - 
> didn't think he was getting enough, although he doesn't seem dehydrated. He's 
> in the house now , and taking the bottle somewhat better - just drank 4 
> ounces.  I know that is nowhere near enough, and he has lost significant 
> weight from his birth weight.
> 
> Has anyone else dealt with this sort of situation?  Is there any point in 
> putting him back with Mom?  I am surprised he is still alive, and wonder if 
> he is or was actually getting some small amount of milk from Mom.
> 
> Any thoughts would be appreciated.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Sandy Hession
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