Rudey
Well-Known Member
Our yard is looking into changing our worming regime, I wondered if you guys would care to help/advise/offer your experiences/knowledge please!
Our horses are kept in herds of (a maximum of) eight horses. Each herd have two fields which we regularly rotate. Once rotated, the farmer harrows the muck back into the empty field to fertilise it by putting goodness back into the ground.
For the last several years we have been on worming programmes, like the Equest and Equest Pramox ones. This year we have changed to a different programme as we were advised to use a different group of wormers before our horses became immune to the Equest, as it's considered one of the strongest wormers available. We were told if our horses became immune to that, we would struggle to beat worms if the were contracted with anything else. At the beginning of October we double dosed with Strongid P.
A vet has suggested not worming the horses as frequently as we do, and look into double dosing in the spring and winter for tapeworm, doing worm counts inbetween, and only worming those who require it, as and when.
How would this work with our current set up? The farmer at our yard will NOT do individual paddocks, he says that we run our horses as herds, end of. He said if we pursue the worm count regime, we will HAVE to poo pick the fields everyday as he does not want to harrow 'infected' muck into the ground and contaminate his fields.
Liveries are reluctant to poo pick for various reasons, but mainly because they will not have the time as they either work full time, are at uni - or the main one - not everyone will contribute their fair share of work (we struggle to get everyone raggy pulling). Which is fair enough in individual paddocks as you do your own, but as herds of eight, it isn't fair if people don't pull their weight.
The farmer also argued that if one horse requires worming, then the whole herd will need doing as the horses muck that has the high worm count, will infect the field, and therefore potentially infect the rest of the horses within that herd, which in turn, will have to be treated anyway.
The farmer wants to continue on our new worming programme which has been devised by a wormer advisor from the company we purchase our wormers from. He will then continue to harrow the fields for us.
The liveries want to come off the programme, and use worm counts. But they don't want to poo pick, but the farmer insists it will need doing if we went ahead with this regime.
What are your thoughts please? What do you do?
Please bear in mind, we run as herds and normally harrow the fields. Is it essential to poo pick when you use the worm count regime? xx
Our horses are kept in herds of (a maximum of) eight horses. Each herd have two fields which we regularly rotate. Once rotated, the farmer harrows the muck back into the empty field to fertilise it by putting goodness back into the ground.
For the last several years we have been on worming programmes, like the Equest and Equest Pramox ones. This year we have changed to a different programme as we were advised to use a different group of wormers before our horses became immune to the Equest, as it's considered one of the strongest wormers available. We were told if our horses became immune to that, we would struggle to beat worms if the were contracted with anything else. At the beginning of October we double dosed with Strongid P.
A vet has suggested not worming the horses as frequently as we do, and look into double dosing in the spring and winter for tapeworm, doing worm counts inbetween, and only worming those who require it, as and when.
How would this work with our current set up? The farmer at our yard will NOT do individual paddocks, he says that we run our horses as herds, end of. He said if we pursue the worm count regime, we will HAVE to poo pick the fields everyday as he does not want to harrow 'infected' muck into the ground and contaminate his fields.
Liveries are reluctant to poo pick for various reasons, but mainly because they will not have the time as they either work full time, are at uni - or the main one - not everyone will contribute their fair share of work (we struggle to get everyone raggy pulling). Which is fair enough in individual paddocks as you do your own, but as herds of eight, it isn't fair if people don't pull their weight.
The farmer also argued that if one horse requires worming, then the whole herd will need doing as the horses muck that has the high worm count, will infect the field, and therefore potentially infect the rest of the horses within that herd, which in turn, will have to be treated anyway.
The farmer wants to continue on our new worming programme which has been devised by a wormer advisor from the company we purchase our wormers from. He will then continue to harrow the fields for us.
The liveries want to come off the programme, and use worm counts. But they don't want to poo pick, but the farmer insists it will need doing if we went ahead with this regime.
What are your thoughts please? What do you do?
Please bear in mind, we run as herds and normally harrow the fields. Is it essential to poo pick when you use the worm count regime? xx