arctictree wrote: » Are you saying that the ewe sat on him?
Siamsa Sessions wrote: » One of the best ewes in the place had triplets here during the worst of the snow (Thurs night here). She was outside in a sheltered grove as she never settled in the shed. Found the 3 of them dead in the snow yesterday morning. Gutted but hopefully that’ll be the only snow-related losses
wrangler wrote: » She hadn't a hope, even to bring her in after lambing would've made the difference, she'd have settled inside once her lambs were with her
razor8 wrote: » This might be useful for someone considering the weather Hypothermia in lambs Administrationhttps://m.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=143&v=mTi6k6C2dXA
farming93 wrote: » snow here has turned to slush and will hopefully be gone by tomorrow, we're due plenty of rain but the fields are dry and well sheltered would I be ok letting lambs out that are a week old or would i be better off waiting another few days ? I was planning on letting them out tomorrow morning but don't want to risk them getting hypothermia. what are yous all doing or what are your opinions here?
wrangler wrote: » A great remedy for lambs that are too far gone for stomach tubing, OH does it here and would put some under the skin behind the shoulders as well, She usually says that if he doesn't bleed even a drop going under the skin, it's not going to work. I'd be nervous of doing it but when it's either that or the lamb die I suppose you'd chance it. have you ever done it
Siamsa Sessions wrote: » That ewe who lost the triplets has a very big dug now. In the past, the milk seemed to just dry up itself but I never saw one with a dug this big. Obviously nothing is drinking her. Is there much I can do or will it just fade itself?
razor8 wrote: » Quote: Green farmer Did you put them in after or how did you manage down south?
Green farmer wrote: » Thankfully got on fine. I kept them out but gave them free access to shed, so they could go in and out as they pleased. Was worried about locking them in as the shed has no side wall and the length of it is facing east. Heard horror stories about snow drifting far into sheds. But luckily we didn’t get excessive snow compared to the rest of the country. Lads up and down the east coast got it much worse then us here. Glad to see the back of it all the same. Scary thing about it was the unknown element and having no control over it. How did you fare out up the country ?
ganmo wrote: » Been trying to keep one ewe alive for the last few days...walked into the shed today to find a different one had croaked. Grr