Sami23 wrote: » How did you lose a few lambs - would you not have seen them when herding and treated them with dip etc. ?
mrfitz wrote: » I have a few sheep this year too. Was looking into Clik and other options. The Clik protection period is 16 weeks, but is very expensive. I've looked at Ectofly; it contains a different active ingredient, but seems to cover everything that Clik does (open to correction on that) The protection period of Ectofly is 6 - 8 weeks which would mean doing them 2 or 3 times during the Summer - not a big job when they're in for a footbath or FEC anyway. It is a lot less expensive than Clik though.
Sami23 wrote: » Vector has same ingredient as Ectofly and is even cheaper
wrangler wrote: » Ectofly didn't last here, also you have to spread it properly on the sheep whereas Clik travels through the fleece. Ectofly only protects where you put it
J.O. Farmer wrote: » Clik is only expensive the day you pay for it. 1 lamb not being struck would cover a fair bit of it not to mention the value of peace of mind.
MayoAreMagic wrote: » Agreed. You could have a lamb fit to go that gets struck and he will be a thin store by the end of it, if alive at all. One of them covers the price of it for the year for me, as I only do the lambs (which tends to cover the ewes also). Add in your time treating for maggots and chasing after ones with dirty backends for fear of them, and clik becomes the cheap option. I see a lad near me going down the ectofly route, out of meaness truth be told - he is doing them and gathering them off the hill again, doing them and getting an odd few struck anyway. 'Ah but that clik is awful dear, this does the job for me, and sure nothing is as good as the plunge dipping for maggots anyway'
k mac wrote: » When you say you only do the lambs and it protects the ewes how does that work. I have only 9 ewes for doing and was advised to get them sheared now and do the lot with clik later but the reason being if I do them with clik now the shearer won't do them. As it is I am struggling to get a Shearer for such small numbers, so if I could get away with just using clik on the lambs who don't need shearing and that meant the ewes were protected it would be ideal
Dinzee Conlee wrote: » Where are you based K-Mac? 9 is a handy number in a way that you load into the trailer and take them to some other lads place...
k mac wrote: » Based in mayo but nobody with sheep around my immediate area.
MayoAreMagic wrote: » The lambs go back to their mothers after treatment and the close contact between the two be it sucking or lying cloee together, seems to keep maggots at bay for their mothers also. That is horned ewes though, which are less prone to maggots, but it has definitely made a difference here.
wrangler wrote: » Unless you get in with another farmer you'll be left until the end of the season. Shearers would be flat out now
Mad about baa baas wrote: » Would 9 sheep be manageable with a hand shears or am I a glutton for punishment?
wrangler wrote: » My father used to do sixty, he'd do a few after tea every evening. The dog would pen them in a corner while he was doing a few
Green farmer wrote: » Did about that number here with a jakoti last year. Same thing, a few here and there. Did some others with an electric hand held shears also, but preferred the jakoti. Want to be careful of your fingers though.
wrangler wrote: » You'd do a lot in a small flock while you'd be waiting for a shearer
Finally got my few ewes sheared last week... how long before i should do them with clik?
i think its about 3 weeks after shearing
Have plans as part of a new shed to put in a new dipping unit. It’s the only job I think.
however only got one lamb with maggots this year so far. Bought the click but never hit around to putting it on yet.
just power washed ewes yesterday very handy will inject them also in a few weeks before going to ram ..