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Health & Nutrition
Thoughts on Deworming Nursing Calves?
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<blockquote data-quote="talltimber" data-source="post: 1260157" data-attributes="member: 22236"><p>I doubt you can get enough on them to burn them, by spraying in the pasture like that, unless they are really tame and you are an idiot like I am. </p><p>You can get enough on them to make them really, really uncomfortable, for a while. I got a case of the dumbass one time and put too much (poured on) on my young bull. Walked out of there, skin crawling like it does to shake a fly?, and then took off. Run this away and that away. I was really having a hard time believing it was the wormer, I thought a really rough horsefly had him going. He run off to the creek and stood in it, like usual in hot weather. That was all there was to it. I got too much on him. No burns though, I got him up that evening and looked him over. Set him on fire for a bit, or at least tingled, a bunch.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="talltimber, post: 1260157, member: 22236"] I doubt you can get enough on them to burn them, by spraying in the pasture like that, unless they are really tame and you are an idiot like I am. You can get enough on them to make them really, really uncomfortable, for a while. I got a case of the dumbass one time and put too much (poured on) on my young bull. Walked out of there, skin crawling like it does to shake a fly?, and then took off. Run this away and that away. I was really having a hard time believing it was the wormer, I thought a really rough horsefly had him going. He run off to the creek and stood in it, like usual in hot weather. That was all there was to it. I got too much on him. No burns though, I got him up that evening and looked him over. Set him on fire for a bit, or at least tingled, a bunch. [/QUOTE]
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Thoughts on Deworming Nursing Calves?
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