03-18-2017, 06:46 PM
I think Nancy meant to reply here so I moved her post and your reply.
One "must-have" item we keep at home and take whenever we travel with goats is a thermometer. Taking a sick goat's temperature is often the first step toward figuring out what's wrong. Low temperature usually indicates rumen trouble while high temperature usually means an infection of some kind.
One "must-have" item we keep at home and take whenever we travel with goats is a thermometer. Taking a sick goat's temperature is often the first step toward figuring out what's wrong. Low temperature usually indicates rumen trouble while high temperature usually means an infection of some kind.