- Thread starter
- #1,591
baymule
Garden Master
I called @Ridgetop on BYH, who is well acquainted with prolapses. We discussed the prolapse ewe. She convinced me that could sew up the ewes vulva to keep the prolapse in.
Ridgetop; Oh! It’s so EASY! Just get a curved needle and dental floss. Spray her lady parts with lidocaine sunburn spray and she won’t feel a thing!
Yeah, right.
So I texted the couple, told them I would care for the ewe, bring her to me. I assured them that she would have the finest of accommodations, her very own Pallet Palace!
I made no promises, but told them I would try my best for live lambs. They were relieved, they really want the best for her, they want the lambs, but both work long hours and just can’t be there for her.
He took the vet wrap off her yesterday morning, I probably had it on too tight. She immediately peed and pooped and yes, popped her prolapse right back out.
We unloaded her, put her in her private suite and gave her water. He admired my Pallet Palaces. LOL he said he throws away pallets and I can have them. They are handy for so many things!
A neighbor who is a nurse, does the prolapses on their cattle, and she came over to guide me through it. She washed off and pushed back in the red wad of uterus, a little bigger than a softball. Chase came over too, he held the ewe. Nurse neighbor had a vial of lidocaine and gave shots of it in the ewe’s vulva. Then we sprayed her back end with the sunburn stuff. And I stitched that poor ewe up.
I gave her a shot of B Complex and half a dozen squirts of Nutridrench. I gave her a wad of alfalfa, some Bahia hay, her own feed that my friend brought for her and called it good. She has been eating, she has drank, so far, so good.
So I learned something new yesterday, how to deal with a prolapse. For those who don’t know what a prolapse is, it’s actually part of the uterus the animal is pushing out. For whatever reasons, they try to give birth way too soon. If not caught and dealt with, the animal will die, along with her unborn young.
The goal is to keep the ewe from pushing her insides out, and hopefully wind up with live lambs. Best case scenario, she lambs, keeps her insides where they belong, and is able to raise her lambs. Her udder hangs low, a pendulous, swinging udder that I would cull her for. Bad udder, prolapse, both are terminal for culling.
Worst case scenario, she keels over dead and we lose the lambs too. Hopefully I can keep her alive, and she has live lambs.
They are ordering a prolapse harness and spoon today to be delivered to me at my house. When I get it, neighbor Chase will come over to help hold the ewe. I’ll cut her stitches out and figure out how to put a prolapse harness on her and the spoon. I’m not real clear on this, never done this before either. The spoon attaches to the harness, the spoon goes inside her “lady parts” and prevents her from pushing her uterus out again, but supposedly she can still give birth to her lambs. It’s best to take it off, but with no due date, who knows when that will be.
My son thinks the whole thing is hilarious and said, “Yeah! Take your prolapse ewe to the crazy old sheep lady!” I pointed out that I’m learning something new and I’ll have the experience in case I have to deal with one of my own. Hahaha.
Y’all wish me luck!
Ridgetop; Oh! It’s so EASY! Just get a curved needle and dental floss. Spray her lady parts with lidocaine sunburn spray and she won’t feel a thing!
Yeah, right.
So I texted the couple, told them I would care for the ewe, bring her to me. I assured them that she would have the finest of accommodations, her very own Pallet Palace!
I made no promises, but told them I would try my best for live lambs. They were relieved, they really want the best for her, they want the lambs, but both work long hours and just can’t be there for her.
He took the vet wrap off her yesterday morning, I probably had it on too tight. She immediately peed and pooped and yes, popped her prolapse right back out.
We unloaded her, put her in her private suite and gave her water. He admired my Pallet Palaces. LOL he said he throws away pallets and I can have them. They are handy for so many things!
A neighbor who is a nurse, does the prolapses on their cattle, and she came over to guide me through it. She washed off and pushed back in the red wad of uterus, a little bigger than a softball. Chase came over too, he held the ewe. Nurse neighbor had a vial of lidocaine and gave shots of it in the ewe’s vulva. Then we sprayed her back end with the sunburn stuff. And I stitched that poor ewe up.
I gave her a shot of B Complex and half a dozen squirts of Nutridrench. I gave her a wad of alfalfa, some Bahia hay, her own feed that my friend brought for her and called it good. She has been eating, she has drank, so far, so good.
So I learned something new yesterday, how to deal with a prolapse. For those who don’t know what a prolapse is, it’s actually part of the uterus the animal is pushing out. For whatever reasons, they try to give birth way too soon. If not caught and dealt with, the animal will die, along with her unborn young.
The goal is to keep the ewe from pushing her insides out, and hopefully wind up with live lambs. Best case scenario, she lambs, keeps her insides where they belong, and is able to raise her lambs. Her udder hangs low, a pendulous, swinging udder that I would cull her for. Bad udder, prolapse, both are terminal for culling.
Worst case scenario, she keels over dead and we lose the lambs too. Hopefully I can keep her alive, and she has live lambs.
They are ordering a prolapse harness and spoon today to be delivered to me at my house. When I get it, neighbor Chase will come over to help hold the ewe. I’ll cut her stitches out and figure out how to put a prolapse harness on her and the spoon. I’m not real clear on this, never done this before either. The spoon attaches to the harness, the spoon goes inside her “lady parts” and prevents her from pushing her uterus out again, but supposedly she can still give birth to her lambs. It’s best to take it off, but with no due date, who knows when that will be.
My son thinks the whole thing is hilarious and said, “Yeah! Take your prolapse ewe to the crazy old sheep lady!” I pointed out that I’m learning something new and I’ll have the experience in case I have to deal with one of my own. Hahaha.
Y’all wish me luck!