Your Icelandic Sheep: Lambing:
Tube Feeding
Tube feeding is not hard...really. Sometimes it is necessary. It
is not a bad idea to try it once or twice in a non emergency situation...
You will need a feeding tube and a catheter tip syringe (available
from livestock supply catalogues, your feed store or online. A turkey
baster will work in tplace of the syringe in a pinch. You will also
want a bowl of warm water and a container of the milk or colostrum
you will be feeding.
Measure the tube along the outside of the lamb with the tip located
behind the front leg,this is where the stomach would be, and along
the neck to the tip of the nose. Note about how long this is, that
is how far you will insert the tube. Wet the tube with warm water
to lubricate it.
Hold the lamb in your lap with it’s head facing your dominant
hand and cupping it's lower jaw in your other hand; pointing the
nose comfortably upwards, that closes the windpipe and makes is
easier to slide the tube into the esophagus. Gently inset the tube
into the lamb’s mouth, letting the lamb swallow the tube if
it is strong enough, if not gently and slowly keep inserting the
tube into the lamb's throat...if you are in the “wrong pipe”,
the lamb may cough and struggle if it is not too weak. If you are
not sure where you have placed the tube, place the end near your
cheek, if air is coming out as the lamb breathes try again, or hold
the end under water to see if it bubbles with breathing. If the
tube is in the windpipe (trachea) you need to take the tube out
and insert it again, into the esophagus.
When you are sure the feeding tube is in the right place, attach
the catheter tip syringe or turkey baster tube (with the bulb removed)into
the end of the tube. You do not need to hurry. If the tube is in
the right place it should not be uncomfortable for the lamb. Fill
the syringe or baster with an ounce or two of the milk. Let the
milk flow into the lamb via the syringe or baster by gravity, do
not force it with a plunger or bulb in place. To remove the syringe
or baster, put your thumb or finger over the end of the tube as
you remove it in one smooth motion, this helps to keep milk from
dribbling in to the windpipe. Try it with just a little warm water
on a healthy lamb...you will be more comfortable if you have to
do it in an emergency in the middle of the night if you have tried
it once.
Lambs often get really warm after you feed them, a flush...like
a hot flash ( some of us may be able to relate to that too)...it
is normal. If a lamb is too weak to suck and swallow , don't force
any milk in without a tube, milk in lungs will make a pneumonia
situation that is hard to treat.
Maintaining your flock's heath is a matter of proper management:
The Healthy Flock: Keeping Your
Sheep in Top Form
Additional Reading: in addition to
our own articles (see below) we recommend: |
|
|
|
|
|
Need the book? We have a list: A
Shepherd's Bookshelf: helpful books on sheep
How do you build your flock if your farm budget is a little
tight? Time, you'll find, is the friend of a farm on a
shoestring. You'd be amazed what a little time can buy you. Let's
take a look at a sample farm that wants Icelandic Sheep, but needs
time so they can spread the investment out over a period of time.
Building a Flock on a Shoestring
back to the resource pages
lambs for sale
rams
for sale
© 2003 by Elaine E.Clark
Frelsi Farm Icelandic Sheep and Icelandic Sheepdogs
www.mainesheepfarm.com
|