@@MountainMamaJohnson sure and I’ll put it in the description too: 1 tsp cayenne pepper 1 Tbsp Olive Oil A a healthy glug of Apple Cider Vinegar or Kombucha. Mix well and put in drench apparatus
If we have to chemically treat her more than 3 times then she’ll be culled. I don’t cull dairy sheep only after one strike though. Especially when there’s dynamics like did they run out of minerals and we didn’t catch it (which happened) or were they on an old lot that needed rest (they were) that effect a sheep’s resiliency. Given how deficient our soil is in so many nutrients, it’s unfair for us to expect the sheep to thrive, improve the soil, provide us milk AND be 100% parasite resistant all at ince
Thank you, very informative video 👍
Thanks for covering bottle jaw. great information!
@@vickiSS so glad you enjoyed it!!!
Could you share that cayenne pepper recipe again?
@@MountainMamaJohnson sure and I’ll put it in the description too:
1 tsp cayenne pepper
1 Tbsp Olive Oil
A a healthy glug of Apple Cider Vinegar or Kombucha.
Mix well and put in drench apparatus
@ awesome thank you!! 🙌
Surely by keeping Aurora, you would be worsening the parasites resistant gene.
If we have to chemically treat her more than 3 times then she’ll be culled. I don’t cull dairy sheep only after one strike though. Especially when there’s dynamics like did they run out of minerals and we didn’t catch it (which happened) or were they on an old lot that needed rest (they were) that effect a sheep’s resiliency.
Given how deficient our soil is in so many nutrients, it’s unfair for us to expect the sheep to thrive, improve the soil, provide us milk AND be 100% parasite resistant all at ince
Cayenne is antiparacitic. Maybe just use cayenne.
I have wondered how much the cayenne does to kill the parasites as well but need to do more research on its efficacy as a solo treatment