Anniebee
Crowing
To locknest4 and appps .....
Thank you for your replies about desexing roosters. As soon as I read the word 'caponising' ... I realised sometihng. That way back when I was a young'un, my Mum would serve up a capon on special occasions. . It was supposed to be a real treat. Tender, and ( they are ) fattened for the table.
Ugh ugh ugh - to the way they caponise a rooster.... that is absolutely gross. But I knew nothing back then - otherwise I probably would have refused to eat it. Surely that doesn't happen now ? Does it. ??? So yes, appps .... if that is still done - then it should be banned outright. Laws brought in, with charges to be laid.
..............
Mind you, castration is different for so many species .... e.g. male cats are desexed very quickly, with a local anaesthetic - the quick snip, often done by a vet. nurse. And they suffer nothing, apparently - the incision begins to close very quickly. They come home, stagger around a bit from the effects of the local and a calmative, and are up and ready to do their thing within a couple of hours. The incisions close very rapidly.
Dogs on the other hand are differently made, and require a full on operation for the procedure. There can be complications after a male dog desexing ( don't I know it ) ... and they can swell badly with 'sterile' fluid in the remaining sac. Fixing THAT takes some doing. I found that 3 x times per day, swabs of fairly hefty salt water, helped enormously to the tiny opening in the skin that allowed seepage. I had to lay down underneath my dog, to do it .... but I did - and it worked - beautifully. All good. He was in no pain btw. Happy as a lark while carrying his large bag of whatever I had to dry up with salt solutions. .
Cattle are something else again. Under the age of 6 months, a bull calf can be castrated with local anaesthetic injection - on site. Any bull calf over that age, or further mature, MUST be done by law, by a veterinarian - with ( I believe ) the full process of GA anaesthetisation. Similarly, a gelded horse can be given a strong calmative and local anaesthetic to the region --- and does not respond badly to the procedure ( ideally ). However, [ most I think ], vets. prefer to put the horse under total anaesthetic for gelding. Ideally - in all instances there should be little or no bleeding resulting. And there usually is not.
I did sort of know most of this, but had to check via Google, that what I was waffling about here, is correct.
Cheers all ----
Thank you for your replies about desexing roosters. As soon as I read the word 'caponising' ... I realised sometihng. That way back when I was a young'un, my Mum would serve up a capon on special occasions. . It was supposed to be a real treat. Tender, and ( they are ) fattened for the table.
Ugh ugh ugh - to the way they caponise a rooster.... that is absolutely gross. But I knew nothing back then - otherwise I probably would have refused to eat it. Surely that doesn't happen now ? Does it. ??? So yes, appps .... if that is still done - then it should be banned outright. Laws brought in, with charges to be laid.
..............
Mind you, castration is different for so many species .... e.g. male cats are desexed very quickly, with a local anaesthetic - the quick snip, often done by a vet. nurse. And they suffer nothing, apparently - the incision begins to close very quickly. They come home, stagger around a bit from the effects of the local and a calmative, and are up and ready to do their thing within a couple of hours. The incisions close very rapidly.
Dogs on the other hand are differently made, and require a full on operation for the procedure. There can be complications after a male dog desexing ( don't I know it ) ... and they can swell badly with 'sterile' fluid in the remaining sac. Fixing THAT takes some doing. I found that 3 x times per day, swabs of fairly hefty salt water, helped enormously to the tiny opening in the skin that allowed seepage. I had to lay down underneath my dog, to do it .... but I did - and it worked - beautifully. All good. He was in no pain btw. Happy as a lark while carrying his large bag of whatever I had to dry up with salt solutions. .
Cattle are something else again. Under the age of 6 months, a bull calf can be castrated with local anaesthetic injection - on site. Any bull calf over that age, or further mature, MUST be done by law, by a veterinarian - with ( I believe ) the full process of GA anaesthetisation. Similarly, a gelded horse can be given a strong calmative and local anaesthetic to the region --- and does not respond badly to the procedure ( ideally ). However, [ most I think ], vets. prefer to put the horse under total anaesthetic for gelding. Ideally - in all instances there should be little or no bleeding resulting. And there usually is not.
I did sort of know most of this, but had to check via Google, that what I was waffling about here, is correct.
Cheers all ----
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