| End of June 07, I am called out to attend a group
of thirty, 1-2 month old lambs: they are not doing well. In reality
they are not well at all, as two died in the days prior to the consultation.
The lambs are part of a small flock of about 40 sheep who live
on a farm that applies as much as possible, biodynamic agriculture.
The process to move to this type of farming started a few years
ago and is still ongoing. Parts of this farming technique are well
documented but there is still much to learn in this specialty.
Just after lambing, most of the lambs were okay, but now they are
going backwards, they are not interested.
A post mortem on one of the lambs shows no pathology that can explain
its death. I just notice a few areas of lung consolidation. Worm
counts are ok, there is no coccidiosis and feeding is fine. In fact,
there are no real reasons why things are not well, but the lambs
waste away. A mineral lick was made available, but this made no
difference.
The lambs have green discharges from their noses but they don’t
cough. The ewes sometimes cough around feeding times. Feeding was
increased but this made no difference. They also suffer with Orf
virus which causes dry thick crusty eruptions to appear around the
mouth and in the ears. The ewes don’t show any lesions. The
Orf outbreak is slow and progressive and does not appear to cause
many problems.
The flock is a mixture of Wensleydale sheep and Suffolk sheep.
The farmer tries to create a mixed breed that is healthy and has
good quality wool and meat. He did bear in mind the possible unexpected
consequences that this experiment might have.
The farmer’s words:
‘Something stops them from using their food. The problems
show in the lambs. The lambs don’t play around much, they
are depressed.
My dog is confused about the sheep. They don’t move when
he tries to shift them. The lambs don’t listen to him either.
The lambs lag behind the ewes. The ewes care about the lambs,
they are good mothers, but the lambs don’t seem to be bothered.
The ewes call them to come and drink. They will come and drink a
little and then just stand there for a while. At other times the
lambs stand there and wait for the mother to come and feed them.
Things are better when the sun shines. The sheep are always
better after shearing (the farmer will repeat this many times during
the consultation).
The lambs will come and nibble at the food when the ewes call
them. They respond to the baa of the mothers. The lambs don’t
care about their mothers. They don’t care to follow them unless
the ewes call them. There is no connection lamb to mother, there
is only a connection mother to lamb. Lambing went well.’
Based on the observation that there is no connection between lamb
and ewe, I gave a dose of Lac Maternum 200.
The farmer will wait 6 weeks before asking me to look at his sheep
again (this is indicative for the remedy I used after this consultation,
considering that he is a caring farmer). There is no real change
but no more mortality occurred. The lambs have grown a little but
are still very sluggish.
We talk about his lambs again and he tells me that it appears to
go exactly the same as last year and the years before.
The year before (September 06), between looking at two cows, he
had asked me to give something for his weaned lambs that were not
doing well. I then remembered them: they were standing in a large
pen, there was no animosity, their wool was of very poor quality,
many were thin and several suffered with mild diarrhoea. They were
also very itchy, but there were no skin lesions. A sample had revealed
the presence of worms. They had just been weaned, and I was told
that none of the lambs really called for their mothers.
On a very basic repertorisation made at the time of: Skin, itch,
eruptions without + Mind, play, aversion to play in children + Rectum,
complaints of worms + Mind, dullness in children, I had given Sulphur
30 one dose in the drinking water. The response was instant and
a few weeks later they were looking very well.
This time (August 07), the farmer reports that there were a few
cases of blow fly infestation but that none had been very severely
affected. There were still the Orf lesions present (normally one
would expect this disease to disappear on its own).
The lambs have big bellies and short legs and look sad as if they
want to give up.
Again the farmer tells me how things always get better after shearing.
Because Sulphur was so effective last year and
because of the disinterested attitude of the lambs (they don’t
seem to care for anything), I decided to give Sulphur again; one
dose of 30 in the drinking water.
Again this is followed by a spectacular result. All the lambs catch
up with the lack of development and will be the right weight by
the end of September.
The whole flock then (September 07) receives one dose of Sulphur
XM, with as a result that for the first time in 5 years, there is
no need for any veterinary help in the flock throughout the whole
year 2007/08.
In my opinion this case is an interesting example of the remedy
Sulphur.
There are the aspects of wanting to improve (farming technique,
type of breed) but it is not sure whether things are working out.
The farmer is in a difficult situation where he wants to improve
the small holding he is working on but cannot decide on every aspect
of the running of the farm. He takes this with a philosophical attitude
and just feels progress is very slow. (Sulph: desire of a higher
value but cannot achieve it)
The lambs are generally unaffected: they don’t care about
anything: food, mother, their own disease, the dog. It is unusual
to have sheep that don’t respond to the dog (poor dog, he
nearly needed counseling). There were no signs of the ewes being
unwell. This would indicate that the flock overall was very unworried
(the lambs certainly were). (Sulph: Cannot be bothered and gives
in to the poor situation he/she is in.)
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