Thank you Mary,

Wow, my situation is very similar. This guy lives only about 7 miles
from me and he also deals heavily in ethnic sales. He really seems
unconcerned. 

What I am wondering now is, what will become of his flock in the future?
Will the footrot eventually cause death? I want to warn him but I think
he is in denial. Maybe he thinks when dry weather returns, all will be
well. 

As far as I am concerned though, I made up my mind yesterday that I
won't return to his farm. NO WAY is it worth the chance. Like I said
before, I have had absolutely no problems with mine other than a few
bouts with coyotes.

One last question(s): Are dorpers or Katahdins highly susceptible to
this FOOTROT? Where can someone go to get a Dorper ram and be assured of
getting a "foot rot free" one? I am very leery of adding ANYTHING to my
flock now. 

I am assuming all you can do is observe the flock you buy from and smell
their feet?, and avoid sale barns?. Stills sounds dangerous to me. 
Would be nice if there were "certified footrot free" flocks.

Thanks again Mary,

Chris


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mary Swindell
Sent: Sunday, September 05, 2004 10:25 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [blackbelly] Sore feet/hooves?

Chris,

Your letter about the breeder with several limping ewes from the 
dorper/katahdin flock sent up an emergency red flag for me.  A few years

ago, I bought katahdins from a local dorper/katahdin breeder.  Several
were 
limping, and he told me the same thing -- it had been wet lately.

However, those sheep actually came in with contagious footrot.  For one
and 
one-half years I battled the horrible disease.  I ended up culling all
the 
purebred katahdins that I had purchased (11 adult ewes and one wonderful

ram), and also the three lambs that were born on my property, to the
sale 
barn for slaughter.  The lambs had developed footrot shortly after 
birth.  The footrot also got into my barbado flock, and I had to cull 
several of those too.

For 18 months, I gave injections, trimmed feet madly, disinfected daily,

kept meticulous records of individual sheep with recurrences,
quarantined 
at several levels (very bad, slightly bad, possibly a problem, and OK), 
made the entire flock stand in a footbath nightly (the treatments took 4

hours per night, every night for over a year).  Slowly, after
heartbreaking 
culling, I began to reduce the problem sheep to just a few.  After 18 
months, I culled the last two sheep (two barbado wethers), and it was a 
hard choice because they both just had a little pinkness between their 
hooves.  But it had to be done, as they were on the record for several 
times of "recurrent" problems.

I do not know where you live, but the sheep breeder who sold me the 
katahdins lives within 15 miles of me.  He does not care whether his
flock 
have good feet or not.  He mostly sells for production, and he sells to
the 
ethnic market, so it doesn't matter that his sheep have foot diseases.
As 
far as I know, he does absolutely nothing to take care of his sheep 
feet.  But the bad part is, he also sells dorper/katahdin crosses to
other 
breeders who are looking for purebreds or for that cross in rams or ewes
to 
start a breeding flock.  PLEASE BE CAREFUL IF YOU BUY FROM HIM, OR
SOMEONE 
WITH A SIMILAR SITUATION!  If you get footrot in your flock, you'll be
in 
for the battle of your life.  And it doesn't matter whether your own
home 
pastures are wet or dry.  The infected sheep will bring the disease in
with 
them.

It has been almost 2 years since I overcame the footrot epidemic on my 
farm.  Only stubbornness on my part and perseverence allowed me to win 
out.  My friend and neighber also battled it many years ago.  He and his

wife went from 35 sheep down to 5 sheep in one year because of the 
disease.  They had to cull everything to save anything.  We are both
very 
careful about having not only other sheep on our premises, but even
having 
visitors here from other farms where the disease might exist.  If you
have 
seen sheep farmers or university farm situations where they ask you to
slip 
on some disposable plastic boot covers before you come into their
pasture 
as a visitor, that is the reason why.

Again, Chris, please be careful what you bring in.  You should not
hesitate 
to examine the feet of his sheep before you buy any of them.  If you
lift a 
foot of a limper and smell a nasty rotten smell between the halves of
the 
foot, that is footrot.  Get down close to the hoof and stick your nose a

few inches from it.  A healthy foot just has an earthy smell.  This is
an 
unmistakable smell of something dead.  Even if you cannot smell it, it
may 
be there in its beginning stages if you see inflamed pink or red tissue,
or 
other symptoms.  The hoof wall will become separated from the soft
tissue 
many times, and there is literally rotten tissue in both the hoof and
the 
soft parts.  If the breeder hesitates to discuss this with you, it would

probably be better if you seek out another breeder, even if you have to 
drive further.

Good luck to you in whatever you decide to do!

Sincerely,
Mary Swindell





===============================================
This message is from the Barbados Blackbelly Sheep mailing list 
(http://www.awrittenword.com/listserv/index.html).
To respond to this message, send e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To unsubscribe or change your membership options, go to 
http://lists.coyotenet.net/mailman/listinfo/blackbelly
To search the archives, go to http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/

Reply via email to