And there ya have it, folks...roll farms said:360$ later, I have 2 bottles of vaccine....and CL went rampant through my 'herd' of 10 goats in the next year. ALL of them had it.
(My suspicion now is that the vaccine was mishandled en route OR wasn't made properly...)
But...hmmm...none were dying or 'sickly'....just icky lumps that I have to lance / drain. Inconvenient? Yes. The end of the world? Nope.
(Again, keep in mind we don't show so I didn't have to worry about that aspect of it...That would be a whole other ball game.)
I vaccinated all the new kids I kept for breeders, my older carriers, etc. Still kept getting it in anyone here longer than 6 mos. It took nearly 2 yrs to use up all of that vaccine.
I don't sell adults, and anyone who's been exposed to the older carriers is here for life, period.
(I catch every kid at birth, the newborns leave at 7-10 days of age from a 'clean' barn, and not ONCE has a kid I've sold ended up w/ CL....Not once. That's close to 200 kids as the herd has grown. )
Once that vaccine ran out, I did more research and thought "Why not try the Case-Bac?" ....so we did....and suddenly the number of new cases of CL dropped. We've been using it on all of our keepers for the last 3 yrs.
As for it being mishandled, consider that Colorado Serum's statement on Case-Bac/Caseous D-T use in goats noted that people could *try* the autogenous vaccine, but they stated that they didn't think it would work very well in goats....maybe it wasn't mishandled at all.
Maybe it just straight-up doesn't work..
Maybe that's why they now require **20** bottles at a minimum, so they can still make $$$.
I know what you mean.. We don't have CL in our herd, but I've seen it first-hand, and I had an interesting conversation with a Vet one day that really worried me a lot... This vet's since moved out of state, but when he was here, he was considered to be THE goat vet for this area..roll farms said:It's not common for anyone to admit they have CL but it's a LOT more common than folks think. Most practice the "sell 'em at the sale barn as they break out and lie through your teeth" route.
Anyhow, we got on the subject of CL and he said that he really didn't think it was that big a deal.. I was surprised, but he went on to say that a lot of folks who claim never to have had it in their herd are liars, and....now, this is the part that really worried me....that "if you run goats long enough, you're gonna get CL eventually."
Of course, my mind immediately ran to biosecurity, closed herds, clorox foot baths, etc... That's all well and good, but you have to buy a new buck every now and again.. There's an opportunity to bring something in.. Sometimes a friend calls and says "Hey, come help me with my goats"....there's another opportunity for CL to come back on boots and tires.. Sometimes a goat friend just pulls in the driveway to say hey...what's on his tires? What about the whitetail who just ran with CL goats down the road then came to visit my farm?
Unfortunately, the vet's right.. In my opinion, anyway.. Somehow, some way, I can't help but think that it will eventually happen. It's just too daggone prevalent around here.
That said...I just ordered Case-Bac from Jeffers, and my herd will be vaccinated for it this weekend. I'm simply not gonna mess around anymore..