ganmo wrote: » Rhodedren nearly lost 4 rams to it years agoBIG buckets of tea helped cure them :P
RD10 wrote: » Hi all, am pulling out an old laurel hedge at the minute, have heard it toxic to cattl & dont think its the nicest anyway. Anyone know anything about Aucuba japonica? Is it safe for cattle? Any other shrubs or trees us farmers need to be wary of?
Donald Trump wrote: » Was the tea for you or the rams?
patsy_mccabe wrote: » Has anyone ever seen cattle poisoned with Laurel? Neighbour here has cow very sick with what I thought was photosensitazation. I've just realised now, that there was a lot of Laurel leaves thrown into the field. I think she might have eaten them.
_Brian wrote: » Problem with cut anything including grass is it allows them eat way too quickly and easily and they will sicken themselves. Part of our land backs onto laurels amd I’ve ever seen cattle touch it at all
Say my name wrote: » If laurel is poisonous to cattle then the variegated form is surely too..? Tbh I've had laurel trees on ditches and never had a problem with poisoning with cattle. I've even had the leaves end up in the silage and the cattle just leave those bits. Maybe that's luck??? Sycamore seeds are supposed to be poisonous to horses. Oak leaves and acorns if eaten in an amount are poisonous to cattle and horses.
Capercaillie wrote: » Will generally only eat laurel if they are starved. The same with fern poisoning, they will generally only it it if starved.
whelan2 wrote: » It's strange though remember the post here a few weeks ago of an animal that died after eating fox gloves. Never saw an animal eat them either
Castlekeeper wrote: » St John's worth, an Hypericum, causes photosensitivity. Bracken is poisonous but rarely eaten, apparatus the danger stage is when the fronds are unfurling if stock are hungry.
_Brian wrote: » Wonder how hungry was that animal, or what essentials was it lacking that drove it to eat a poisonus plant like that.... Have never ever seen any animal eat fox glove and some years we have plenty.
Hard Knocks wrote: » Is Groundsel Dangerous after it’s cut?
Base price wrote: » Apparently it is if enough of it is eaten the same as ragwort. It is the same family as ragwort. See 3.2 in the link.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4690134/
Lime Tree Farm wrote: » I see horsetail in that list. We have an invasion of horsetail along by the river. The cows eat them, I didn't know they were poisonous.
Hard Knocks wrote: » Thanks I better lift the few just to be safe
Base price wrote: » TBH we have some growing in the fields and until seeing your post I didn't know they were poisonous. Did Kovu post a pic a of them a few weeks ago?
Tig98 wrote: » I think Ivy is actually good for them, something like iodine in the leaves that's good for their immune system. They all love it here anyway, especially before they come in and grass is tight My father had a cow here years ago that ate ragwort. The vet gave her an injection to make her eat and she was fine. Its the same thing they give to old ones in nursing homes to give them an appetite apparently