Poisoning due to dry pasture
bbsmfg3
Reg. Dec 2006
Posted 2012-07-31 10:47 PM (#145984)
Subject: Poisoning due to dry pasture


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Location: Missouri
With the extremely dry pastures, our stock is likely to start eating plants they would not normally eat, and some of them may be poison.

If you find your stock, stiff in the joints and walking slow and stiff, it is probably some noxious plant.

We had this happen a few weeks ago. This is the cure we used, that worked, ok, and then after the fact was approved by the vet. Give them 4 to 6 grams of bute, or 5 cc of banamine, not both, then a quadrupple dose of electrolytes, then keep them moving and have plenty of warm water available. And if you have any green clean grass, let them pick at this occasionally.. This will wash the poison thru.

Edited by bbsmfg3 2012-07-31 10:48 PM
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heritagelanefarm
Reg. Jul 2006
Posted 2012-08-01 7:15 AM (#145987 - in reply to #145984)
Subject: RE: Poisoning due to dry pasture


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Location: southcentral pennsylvania
When the pasture is dry, we keep hay in front of the stock so they are not tempted to fill up on noxious plants.
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bbsmfg3
Reg. Dec 2006
Posted 2012-08-01 5:25 PM (#145995 - in reply to #145987)
Subject: RE: Poisoning due to dry pasture


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I had hay in front of mine 24/7, but they still preferred the green of the noxious plants.
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crowleysridgegirl
Reg. Apr 2005
Posted 2012-08-02 12:08 AM (#145999 - in reply to #145984)
Subject: RE: Poisoning due to dry pasture


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Spray your pasture at the end of winter/early spring with 2,4-D and Cimmaron or Pastora,and you won't have that problem.

Edited by crowleysridgegirl 2012-08-02 12:09 AM
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bbsmfg3
Reg. Dec 2006
Posted 2012-08-02 11:05 AM (#146011 - in reply to #145999)
Subject: RE: Poisoning due to dry pasture


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Location: Missouri
I don't think the US Forest Service would like me spraying their grass lands.

AND, if I sprayed my pasture with these products, I'd also kill all of the legumes, I've worked so hard to establish.

So far I've not had any problems here at home, and not quite sure how I'll handle it if we get much dryer. Fortunately, we got an inch of rain last week and the pasture is fairly green, for now.
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olehossgal
Reg. Dec 2003
Posted 2012-08-02 1:56 PM (#146014 - in reply to #145984)
Subject: RE: Poisoning due to dry pasture


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Location: New Mexico

So, you have a grazing lease on US Forest Service land?

Here, the most likely 'problem' plant is locoweed.Over time, I have spotted a FEW plants(which I pull) trying to sprout out on the front of my acreage but thankfully, NEVER any on the back part, which is where the horses live and are turned out on the rare occasions when we have enough rain for the sparse native grass to grow(so far this year, they've been out three times, for one hour...so it's drylot living, with generous hay, for them.) I have never had a horse afflicted, but have known some who were...loco-afflicted horses may well NEVER again be usable, and may also always be 'addicted', so can never again be pastured where there is even the chance it may grow.

I suspect you haven't SEEN 'dry pasture' if you haven't been in long-drought-stricken NM....

Margo in NM (AKA olehossgal)

 

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bbsmfg3
Reg. Dec 2006
Posted 2012-08-02 3:49 PM (#146017 - in reply to #146014)
Subject: RE: Poisoning due to dry pasture


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Location: Missouri
" you have a grazing lease on US Forest Service land?"

No, we were camping in the Mountains. Only one horse ate the poison stuff, the others left it alone.
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turbodog13
Reg. Jul 2012
Posted 2012-08-08 3:41 PM (#146177 - in reply to #145984)
Subject: RE: Poisoning due to dry pasture


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Posts: 10

Location: DeLad, Fl.

Ask your vet befor you give Bute or Banamine.

 I have a horse that had gone into liver failure do to eating Olieander plant over my pasture fencing.

He did recover but can never have Bute or Banamine again.

This horse should have died his liver levels were so off the wall. We now have blood work done every 6 months or when something isn't right with him.

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bbsmfg3
Reg. Dec 2006
Posted 2012-08-09 7:35 AM (#146185 - in reply to #146177)
Subject: RE: Poisoning due to dry pasture


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Posts: 376
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Location: Missouri
"Ask your vet befor you give Bute or Banamine"

Good idea, however, most of the time when they need it, we don't have a vet with us, and there is no phone service. It's either give it or they die. The choice is simple. I suppose we might kill one some day, but so far they have all been saved with it's use.
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