- Thread starter
- #21
newbiekat
Loving the herd life
We have had 2 abscesses in our herd that looked suspicious- one ping-pong ball sized one under the ear of a goat (we think it is from a puncture wound from the welded wire fence he tore up :/) and another in the location of a vaccine. Both were drained and the contents sent off for testing which ended up not being CL. I hope the same is for you.![]()
Would you happen to know what the contents of your abscesses looked like? Was it thick?
It was not CL
I dunno, he didn't seem stressed about the CL because it's so prevalent, I'm guessing. Hubby was really ticked because if it was CL and it burst on our farm, they did NOTHING to prevent it. Fortunately, it hasn't burst and the vet basically said, well since its inconclusive and because of the location of the abscess I'd say it's safe to say its not CL. UHHHH WHAT??
So, basically we are waiting for the incubation period to pass, then we will do our usual CL blood testing and go from there. The part I struggle with, is, like you said SBC, it's almost inevitable that you WILL get it on your farm at some point, so what do I do if it is positive? I've read everything from just labeling your farm CL positive anytime you sell, to putting them down. But if we have dairy goats, and we milk them even if just for personal use, there's no point in keeping them because the milk is not safe to drink. So does that mean it's not wise to have goats at all for milking because they will eventually get CL at some point?? Or we will have to pasteurize the milk every time? We usually drink the milk raw... I mean, we have always had a negative herd, which is why I'm struggling right now because I'm stressing about if they do come back positive. I know there's no point in stressing before hand, but I kinda need a plan for if they do come back positive.
