[Jacob-list] docking

Melanie melanie.boxall at sympatico.ca
Tue Jan 13 13:02:08 EST 2004


Just my 5cents, might be intetresting to get data from everyone and do a sort of informal survey. We've never docked and we've never had flystrike. I don't see much manure contamination even when we've sheared late and the weather has been hot, as they seem to be able to lift their tails better than modern sheep. N.B. I've seen flystrike on rabbits and chickens and it wasn't due to manure contaimnation then anyway.

Melanie
My mind not only wanders, it sometimes leaves completely.





  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Elaina Kenyon 
  To: jacob-list at jacobsheep.com 
  Sent: Monday, January 12, 2004 3:02 PM
  Subject: [Jacob-list] docking


  Hi Gillian,

  The conventional wisdom about docking is that is aids in flystrike prevention.  While I suppose this is true with very wooly tailed sheep, I don't see it as nearly as big an issue with jacobs because their tails are less wooly than lots of other breeds of sheep.  Also sheep don't necessarily get flystrike starting around manure on the tail area.  This past year I had a case of fly strike in a young lamb who nearly died from it and I've seen a couple of others now.  In all these cases, the infestation started at the top of the rump where it begins to slope toward the tailhead and there wasn't manure contamination of these areas.  

  The other reason people dock tails is that a docked sheep is generally more salable than one that hasn't been docked.  You'll find exceptions, but most people do seem to like docked tails.

  Elaina M. Kenyon
  http://www.avillionfarm.com
  Shetland sheep, angora goats, angora rabbits
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