Found this in another thread....regarding corid dosage:
Not even close. Remember I said extrememly high doseage? It's 6 1/4 cc per 25 lb, used undiluted right from the bottle, for 5 days.
That's for the corid liquid 9.6% solution....does the package say how to mix it w/ water to achieve that strength???
(ie, if it says "mix w/ 100 gallons of water to reach 9.6%...maybe you could mix 1/100 of the package w/ 1 gallon of water to reach the right strength....?)
In regards to the questions Bee posted...
#1.
A) If you're 'doing it right'...they're NOT a financial hardship or worry...
I haven't lost a goat in years....and the last one was to an accident...which they are prone to....other than worry about "How can they find a way to break a leg today...?" I don't 'worry' about them.
I spend more money on feed / hay than I do on meds...the meds I buy are preventative for the most part (other than my emergency stash for when they get injured)...and other than routine care, good pasture, and pen maintenance / clean up....They're not much work.
(We've had horses, llamas, alpacas, sheep, rabbits, pigs, cattle, and the goats are the only ones who've made it long term because, for our situation, they're the ones who fit us the best.)
B) Some of the folks here either buy goats and THEN wonder about what to do with / for them or buy them from unscrupulous breeders or sale barns....so you can see the exact same symptoms / questions posted over and over but it's generally the same situation...
"I'm new, my goat is ______. HELP!"
#2.
I'm also of the opinion that raising dairy goats in confined situations has weakened the gene pool...and that trying to raise Boer goats (from dry Africa, where they browse thousands of acres) in a 50 x 200' pen has helped create stronger bugs and weaker animals.
Our first goats never got a shot, medicine, special mineral, etc...but they weren't fancy, just Nubs I bought from a lady down the road...who'd been breeding them for 20 years as back yard milkers.
I bought some pedigreed goats later on...and then...pedigreed Boer goats....and thus began the education of Kim on all the different ailments and illnesses goats can have / get / live with / die from.
Another thing to note....30 years ago, CAE and CL weren't really blips on the radar....so nobody freaked out / tested / etc. You see several posts related to these 'new' problems that the 'hardy herds of the past' didn't get.
We do breed for hardier stock here w/ our herd. If I have to deworm a goat a lot....she's gone. If they have foot problems...*poof*
I sell them to pet homes or for food. (Can't bring myself to eat one, but I don't mind selling them to be eaten.)
I won't say they shouldn't be owned as pets, b/c our first goats were pets...but if you're A) unwilling to learn / provide proper care before getting the animal(s) and B) unable financially to provide said proper care, then you do not need them.
If the only place you can afford to get a goat from is a sale barn....you do not need goats, and I will stand by that comment until I die.
(I'm talking about the people who are too cheap to invest in good stock, or the folks who don't have enough money for vet bills if needed, not the spur-of-the-moment, "he's cute, let's get him" types...that happens to the best of us...hence the Patagonian Cavy and Prairie Dog I have as pets...)
Dewormer can be expensive....hay can be expensive in a drought year...a vet call for a stuck kid can be expensive....these things happen and will happen when it's the most inconvenient...it's Murphy's Goat Law.
50% of the posts you see could probably have been avoided if the proper preventative care had been done or if the proper research had been done before buying the goats to begin with....and that's not a slam on anyone....nobody's born knowing everything and you can't help what the previous owner did / didn't do that they should / shouldn't have.
Being willing to learn, and the WILL to do what's needed...are the main 'requirement' for goat ownership. JMHO....