Southdown
Loving the herd life
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2012
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- 340
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My one lamb, Leroy, was born 4/4/11. We wanted him to be a wether, so we did the banding technique for castration at age 13 days. My husband and I struggled to do this procedure, as it took three tries before we believed we got it. It was, in fact, very difficult to "milk" or pull down the testes. Then when I placed the band above them, they would slip right back up! After the third try, we believe we were successful. We felt below the band and it seemed that two, pea sized testes were below the band. Whew! Life went on. Now, as it is Winter time (January) we are finding that he is behaving similar to an intact ram. We are concerned. Did we not do the castration properly? I am definitely not an expert, so I don't really know what I'm feeling for as I check him today. We asked the vet on the phone, and the vet said that there is other anatomy there that we could be feeling (not necessarily a testicle). Ok. But our little wether sure likes to push his nose on the side of the ewes and try to mount them. He also likes to ram the other wether in the pen with him. He will even scuff his front hoof on the ground and make a run for the other wether. He never butts him so hard that anyone gets hurt, but he definitely wants to show the other wether that he is boss. He only playfully rubbed his head on my leg once. Nevertheless, I was concerned because we have treated him like a pet and have been very friendly with him because I know we castrated him and it could be allowed. Maybe he is just taking a while to get the testosterone out of his system? Do you think we may have banded wrong? Or do some wethers act more male-like than others?
Thanks for any feedback in advance.
Thanks for any feedback in advance.