12-16-2017, 09:57 AM
You'll probably have to watch your goats from afar to see if your timid one is becoming aggressive or if the others are picking on her and she is defending herself. That'll tell you if it's a problem of the disbudded being injured by the horned.
Do a complete walkabout of your pens/pasture to be sure there is nothing they could have stepped on/in that could injure them.
I am not a fan of giving goats aspirin. You have to give them extremely high doses because the rumen doesn't absorb aspirin well. I use Banamine. 1cc/100#. Given IM is fastest acting but SQ is longer lasting.
Do a complete walkabout of your pens/pasture to be sure there is nothing they could have stepped on/in that could injure them.
I am not a fan of giving goats aspirin. You have to give them extremely high doses because the rumen doesn't absorb aspirin well. I use Banamine. 1cc/100#. Given IM is fastest acting but SQ is longer lasting.
Goatberries Happen!