I search around a little, but didn't really find what I was looking for.
I need to deworm my goats. I havn't done it in 3 years, and I have a goat that's eyes are looking pale. The last time they were dewormed was with Safeguard. Three of my goats are in milk and I have 6 babies. We are working on a new pasture for them, but I'm not sure how long until it's done. What dewormer should I use? How quickly should I move them after I deworm them? Can I save the milk? The dosage is by weight, right? How do I know how much my goats weigh? Should I just deworm all of them, including babies? Or just the adults?
Thanks!
Replies
Anna Cummings said:
You only need to deworm the one with the pale eyelids. If everyone else's eyelids are red, they're fine. The old advice (still given by a lot of vets) was to deworm the whole group because they assumed that everyone would have the same wormload, but research has shown that 80% of the worms in your flock/herd are harbored by a very small percentage of your animals. A couple years ago, I had a buck who had a horrendous wormload and spent a week dieing. I did fecals on the rest of the bucks that lived with him, and none of them had anything significant. I counted 40 eggs on the slide of the sick buck without even moving it, so there were probably a thousand eggs on the slide, but on the rest of the bucks, I found three to six eggs on the entire slide. I did not deworm the rest of them, and they were all fine. The more you use a dewormer, the quicker resistance builds up.
If Safeguard worked last time -- and it sounds like it did, since you haven't had any problems -- I'd use it again. As the name implies it has a very wide margin of safety. Most adult NDs are about 75 pounds, so I just dose for 100 pounds with Safeguard. Underdosing leads to dewormer resistance. I usually wait two weeks before using milk from a goat that has been given a dewormer -- longer if I don't really need the milk.
If you're following the "smart drenching" protocol outlined above, the timing of the pasture move isn't that important.