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Cattle Boards
Health & Nutrition
lesions on bottom of stomach
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<blockquote data-quote="beehunter" data-source="post: 520077" data-attributes="member: 8091"><p>Thanks for your replies.</p><p></p><p>Re: our location = Indiana. Winter tones down in Feb, with only occasional freezing in March; now we're consistently 50+ during day and 40+ at night - but still early for flies to be in air. But I would guess it's prime time for larval activity.</p><p></p><p>Re: scratching - the cow is losing her winter coat, so I've seen her rub occasionally on fences. I suppose there are a couple spots where she could straddle a rock or tree and rub on the bottom of her stomach, but the spots seem more like individual lesions rather than a continuous scratch.</p><p></p><p>Her overall body condition is good for late winter. No loss of appetite or signs of any other trouble.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="beehunter, post: 520077, member: 8091"] Thanks for your replies. Re: our location = Indiana. Winter tones down in Feb, with only occasional freezing in March; now we're consistently 50+ during day and 40+ at night - but still early for flies to be in air. But I would guess it's prime time for larval activity. Re: scratching - the cow is losing her winter coat, so I've seen her rub occasionally on fences. I suppose there are a couple spots where she could straddle a rock or tree and rub on the bottom of her stomach, but the spots seem more like individual lesions rather than a continuous scratch. Her overall body condition is good for late winter. No loss of appetite or signs of any other trouble. [/QUOTE]
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