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Excessive Vet Charges At Sale Barn?
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<blockquote data-quote="farmerjan" data-source="post: 1455651" data-attributes="member: 25884"><p>Donkeys and mules are very good at predator control for sheep and goats...IF..... the males have been gelded and if they are kept singularly with each group. Some just never get it, but most usually do. The jenny's will do a good job most times, but we have had a few over the years that have hated the baby lambs. Do fine with them once they are say half grown, but couldn't let them in with ewes with new lambs. Had a male that did great with any of them except the ewes with new lambs. Had one that was like an over protective zealot with the ewes and lambs and saw it run coyotes out of a field that should have been able to kill some but that donkey was like 10 super heros put together. That is probably the reason why the ones you took in brought the money. </p><p></p><p>The trick is to keep only one in the field with the sheep/goats so they bond. And a female will protect her own before anything else. We never kept a female that had a baby in with any of them. </p><p></p><p>Many people will run guardian dogs of some type, but it doesn't work if they are on say rented pasture or away from the home farm or the fences are only good enough to keep livestock in but not dog proof. I also did not see the benefit to having dogs and have to go feed them daily when donkeys or llamas ate what the sheep were eating.</p><p></p><p>Coggins here runs $25.00 and up according to what vet, if they come out to the farm or whatever. I would say that $30.00 each was fair for it, according to what is normal around here.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="farmerjan, post: 1455651, member: 25884"] Donkeys and mules are very good at predator control for sheep and goats...IF..... the males have been gelded and if they are kept singularly with each group. Some just never get it, but most usually do. The jenny's will do a good job most times, but we have had a few over the years that have hated the baby lambs. Do fine with them once they are say half grown, but couldn't let them in with ewes with new lambs. Had a male that did great with any of them except the ewes with new lambs. Had one that was like an over protective zealot with the ewes and lambs and saw it run coyotes out of a field that should have been able to kill some but that donkey was like 10 super heros put together. That is probably the reason why the ones you took in brought the money. The trick is to keep only one in the field with the sheep/goats so they bond. And a female will protect her own before anything else. We never kept a female that had a baby in with any of them. Many people will run guardian dogs of some type, but it doesn't work if they are on say rented pasture or away from the home farm or the fences are only good enough to keep livestock in but not dog proof. I also did not see the benefit to having dogs and have to go feed them daily when donkeys or llamas ate what the sheep were eating. Coggins here runs $25.00 and up according to what vet, if they come out to the farm or whatever. I would say that $30.00 each was fair for it, according to what is normal around here. [/QUOTE]
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