T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1116.1 | Try Tufts Vet Hospital | TOOK::SCHLENER | | Mon Nov 06 1989 12:37 | 12 |
| Sorry to hear about this. It must be horrible waiting to see if your
horses come down with "whatever".
One thing I would suggest, is have someone call Tufts New England Vet
Medical Center (part of Tufts University School of Vet medicine).
Their number is 508 - 839 - 5395.
They may have come across something like this.
Remember the time change. I'm not sure who's available after 5pm.
GOOD-LUCK!
Cindy
|
1116.2 | Source Found-Hay Cubes | IVOGUS::SCHOOLER | | Thu Nov 09 1989 15:39 | 8 |
| The cause has been identified. It was in the feed. I, along with a number
of other owners, were very relieved that the source of toxin was found.
Apparently small animals, either rodents or rabbits were picked up in the
hay combine and processed along with the hay into cubes. In compressed
cubes, the natural decay of the animal parts occurs in a vacuum creating
Clostridium, type C botulism. Needless to say, all the horses are getting
baled hay. I now see this is one major drawback of cubes; Fifteen horses
had to be put down.
|
1116.3 | SOURSE INFORMATION ON THE CUBES REQUESTED | STAFF::GREENWOOD | | Mon Nov 13 1989 09:43 | 15 |
| Re: .0 & .2
That had to have been an awful experience. Hope your 4 are still
among the uninfected.
We have one horse who has a dust alergy so we feed cubes to him.
Is there any brand, date, lot No. information that is available
for the cubes you all used? Was this "cuber" a local or a national
distributor.
Thanks in advance,
Dick
|
1116.4 | | VMSSPT::PAANANEN | In a class all by myself | Tue Nov 14 1989 09:35 | 4 |
|
FYI, there is an article about botulism in the Nov/Dec issue of
Horse Care magazine. Pages 25-29.
|
1116.5 | see also note 481.141 | GENRAL::LEECH | Customer Services Engineer ** We do the job ** | Tue Mar 06 1990 14:40 | 1 |
|
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1116.6 | Infected Alfalfa in So. Cal. | GENRAL::LEECH | Customer Services Engineer ** We do the job ** | Tue Mar 06 1990 14:54 | 33 |
|
A fungus that has spread to nearly all northern alfalfa-producing
states since first being reported in the United States in 1977 has
suprised researchers by surviving in warmer climates. Verticillium
albo-atrum causes a disease, commonly called veticillium wilt, that is
becoming and increasing problem in Souther California. The disease has
been confirmed in Riverside, San Luis Obispo, and Santa Barbera
counties.
Although there is no known danger to horses eating infected alfalfa,
the fungus should be of concern to horsemen because it results in lower
crop yields. The infected plants have a wilted, bunchy appearance and
have leaves with yellow V-shaped lesions on the outer margins. The
infected plants also are shorter than their healthy counterparts.
The fungus can be spread from the manure of horses which have injested
infected plants. The fungus also is spread through mowing, because it
can be carried on machinery blades used to cut infected plants.
If a grower knows one of his fields is infected, he should mow that
field last, according to Dr. Donald Erwin of the plant pathology
department at the University of California at Riverside. Dr. Erwin and
graduate research assistant Amy Howell are studying the fungus'
survivability and are about one year away from developing a nondormant
variety of alfalfa that will be resistant to it.
Dormant varieties that are resistant to the fungus already are
available. The Certified Alfalfa Seed Council has a publication
listing those varieties. The book, called ALL ABOUT ALFALFA VARIETIES,
can be obtained by writing P.O. Box 1017, Davis, California 95617.
The Blood Horse dated Mar. 3, 1990.
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1116.7 | where | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Wed Jul 29 1992 20:58 | 5 |
| If the originator of this note is still active, I would like to know
what barn you were at. I am in the Orange Co. area and would like to
find some fellow noters in this area.
virginia cwo
|