Free Alpacas Newsletter- How to Profit from Alpaca Farming

Saturday, October 02, 2010

Re: [AlpacaTalk] Help Please

 

Oh, Tina!  You are right!  He did say eggs.  I don't know the difference!
 
Ellen


From: Tina Travis <traviselkhornalpacas@yahoo.com>
To: AlpacaTalk@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sat, October 2, 2010 7:31:45 AM
Subject: Re: [AlpacaTalk] Help Please

 

                 Ok I am confused now---Did he find maggots or fly eggs? Heather how did you take it?      Maggots have to have dead flesh to eat upon and he found no sores or open areas on this cria?
 

Tina Travis  

Elkhorn Alpacas

31655 Elkhorn Glen

Warrenton,MO.63383

636-359-0250 / 636-459-8930

traviselkhornalpacas@yahoo.com

www.elkhornalpacas.com

 Alpacas are a rare treasure,

 one that I like to share!!!!




From: Ellen Farrell <donnaobyna@yahoo.com>
To: AlpacaTalk@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sat, October 2, 2010 8:25:41 AM
Subject: Re: [AlpacaTalk] Help Please

 

Heather coined the phrase and my skin is crawling...
 
Laurel, or anyone, what causes fly strike?  Is there an injury to begin the process?  Is it only newborns?  I have seen maggots in a wound on a dog once, hidden by his long hair, but the wound came before the "clean-up crew".
 
Okay, not going to ponder long "witnessing the consumption of...", but this brings another question: in a popular fictional book series, the doctor actually utilized maggots to clean out dead tissue from infected wounds.  The idea was that the maggots did not eat sound flesh and kept gangrene from establishing by the "rapid" clean-up.  At the time, I remember wondering if there was any basis of historical fact there.  Anyone know?
 
Ellen Farrell
Auburn, CA


From: Bluebird Hills Farm <bluebirdhills@voyager.net>
To: AlpacaTalk@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sat, October 2, 2010 6:00:21 AM
Subject: Re: [AlpacaTalk] Help Please

 

Jim,
What you are seeing is the start of fly strike and it takes only a day or two to have maggots literally chewing a hole in your cria. Be very attentive and consider something guaranteed to kill. I had this for the first time last year and there were multiple spots on a two day old cria where we had dime size holes in the cria's skin!

All ended well, but it is just amazing how quickly it all happened. If you have ever witnessed the consumption of a carcass my maggots, you will understand that it is a matter of hours, not days.

I ended up doing a cria cut on this little guy to be assured that I got all of them and found 3 more batches of eggs.

Laurel
The Shouvlins
Bluebird Hills Farm
Springfield, Ohio
937-206-3936
www.bluebirdhills.com
bluebirdhills@voyager.net

> This past Thursday I had a snow white blue eyed male cria born.
> Everything has been going terrific until this evening when I was giving
> him his evening pet and rubbing I felt knots in fiber on his stomach, when
> I investigated it was FLY EGGS!! Immediately checked for wounds or
> dried blood and checked his navel for infection. Nothing. So I combed
> out the eggs and spray both mama an cria with on herbal fly spray,
> retreated the navel with betadine. Is there anything else I should do?
> What on earth would cause this to happen? I would really appreciate any
> advice on this. Jim




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