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Son's update... 
GIANT crate in his vehicle...
Tomorrow morning...add ram lamb...

GIANT crate in his vehicle...

Tomorrow morning...add ram lamb...

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The girls with the crabapples put me in mind of one of our Cockers, ages ago, she was more cat like than dog. By that I mean she treated us like servants.
My mom used to put green tomatoes in brown grocery bags to ripen.This dog used to check out the bags often. She's steal a green tomato and hide it under the dining room table- in full view to us. One bite and she'd spit it out ,apparently never learning her lesson. One by one all the green tomatoes ended up under the table with one bite in them.
My mother didn't learn her lesson either, setting tomatoes on the floor was just asking for them to be taken.
Tara don't you have to quarantine?
Tara, you are always so funny - love the remark about "scratch and sniff," no thanks!!
That's neat about the rams - no integration problems like with chickens.
Tara don't you have to quarantine?
General
Ovine Progressive Pneumonia is a viral disease of sheep in North America. Common synonyms for this disease are Progressive Pneumonia and OPP. The OPP virus closely resembles Maedi-Visna which is a similar slow or retrovirus found in other parts of the world. The OPP virus can cause disease with any of the following signs: severe and progressive weight loss, labored breathing or pneumonia, paralysis, swollen joints associated with lameness, and palpably hard, unproductive udders. However most infected sheep never show clinical signs of disease. Once a sheep is infected with the virus, that animal stays infected for its lifetime and serves as a carrier even in the presence of high levels of circulating antibodies. Unlike some viral diseases, the presence of antibodies is not indicative of immunity.
Prevalence
A recent study found that 26% of the sheep in the United States are infected with the OPP virus. In some flocks the incidence of infection is much higher and can approach 100%; in others it is much lower. Related retroviruses are found in sheep worldwide with the exception of Australia, Iceland and New Zealand. The incidence of infection increases with ewe/ram age probably due to sheep-to-sheep spread of the virus. The percent of infected sheep that develop clinical disease is variable and is possibly dependent on flock management, strain and dose of virus, and genetics of sheep.
What is Johne's disease and what causes it?
Morphology
Johne's (pronounced "Yoh-nees") disease and paratuberculosis are two names for the same animal disease. Named after a German veterinarian*, this fatal gastrointestinal disease was first clearly described in a dairy cow in 1895.
A bacterium named Mycobacterium avium ss. paratuberculosis (let’s abbreviate that long name to “MAP”) causes Johne’s disease. The infection happens in the first few months of a lamb’s life but the sheep may stay healthy for a very long time. Symptoms of disease may not show up for many months to years later. This infection is contagious, which means it can spread from one sheep to another, and from one species to another (cows to sheep, sheep to goats, etc.).
MAP is hardy - while it cannot replicate outside of an infected animal, it is resistant to heat, cold and drying. See "Biology of M. avium ss. paratuberculosis" for more information about this bacterial pathogen.