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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| Has anyone used this? Curious how well it works, or doesn't work. | |
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     Location: Not Where I Want to Be | it doesn't work
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| I do! I really like it. Slicks them off nice, and they look good! | |
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 BHW Resident Surgeon
Posts: 25351
          Location: Bastrop, Texas | I don't care if a de-wormer makes a horse look slick. The question is, are these herbs effective? How do we know? | |
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| The same way I knew when a horse was wormy when I used regular wormers--rough hair, pot belly, ribby, poor feed utilization. I have a lot of horses in and out since I train full-time, and it's usually obvious when the worming program isn't working. I haven't seen any of those things in the horses that have been on it, and it's more cost effective than what I was doing before, so I'll stick with it. A person should get a fecal count done if not sure! | |
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 Expert
Posts: 5290
     
| jenagarwood - 2017-03-06 11:44 AM
The same way I knew when a horse was wormy when I used regular wormers--rough hair, pot belly, ribby, poor feed utilization. I have a lot of horses in and out since I train full-time, and it's usually obvious when the worming program isn't working. I haven't seen any of those things in the horses that have been on it, and it's more cost effective than what I was doing before, so I'll stick with it. A person should get a fecal count done if not sure!
I tried Herbal wormers twice and had fecal egg counts done. First time I used it my fecal egg count came back very high. I called company and was told it was doing its job by making the horse get rid of the eggs and worms. I then used a traditional wormer and my egg count came back zero. So does that mean the traditional wormer didnt work??? LOL I will stick to my vets recommendations. | |
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| FLITASTIC - 2017-03-06 1:59 PM
jenagarwood - 2017-03-06 11:44 AM
The same way I knew when a horse was wormy when I used regular wormers--rough hair, pot belly, ribby, poor feed utilization. I have a lot of horses in and out since I train full-time, and it's usually obvious when the worming program isn't working. I haven't seen any of those things in the horses that have been on it, and it's more cost effective than what I was doing before, so I'll stick with it. A person should get a fecal count done if not sure!
I tried Herbal wormers twice and had fecal egg counts done. First time I used it my fecal egg count came back very high. I called company and was told it was doing its job by making the horse get rid of the eggs and worms. I then used a traditional wormer and my egg count came back zero. So does that mean the traditional wormer didnt work??? LOL I will stick to my vets recommendations.
Stick with what works for your program! I'm not trying to argue with anyone, the OP asked for opinions and I shared mine. | |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| FLITASTIC - 2017-03-06 1:59 PM
jenagarwood - 2017-03-06 11:44 AM
The same way I knew when a horse was wormy when I used regular wormers--rough hair, pot belly, ribby, poor feed utilization. I have a lot of horses in and out since I train full-time, and it's usually obvious when the worming program isn't working. I haven't seen any of those things in the horses that have been on it, and it's more cost effective than what I was doing before, so I'll stick with it. A person should get a fecal count done if not sure!
I tried Herbal wormers twice and had fecal egg counts done. First time I used it my fecal egg count came back very high. I called company and was told it was doing its job by making the horse get rid of the eggs and worms. I then used a traditional wormer and my egg count came back zero. So does that mean the traditional wormer didnt work??? LOL I will stick to my vets recommendations.
Did you try the silver lining one? I know there's a few different ones out there. | |
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 Warrior Mom
Posts: 4400
     
| jenagarwood - 2017-03-06 1:44 PM
The same way I knew when a horse was wormy when I used regular wormers--rough hair, pot belly, ribby, poor feed utilization. I have a lot of horses in and out since I train full-time, and it's usually obvious when the worming program isn't working. I haven't seen any of those things in the horses that have been on it, and it's more cost effective than what I was doing before, so I'll stick with it. A person should get a fecal count done if not sure!
Says to give it for 10 days... is that per month or??? | |
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| want2chase3 - 2017-03-06 2:50 PM
jenagarwood - 2017-03-06 1:44 PM
The same way I knew when a horse was wormy when I used regular wormers--rough hair, pot belly, ribby, poor feed utilization. I have a lot of horses in and out since I train full-time, and it's usually obvious when the worming program isn't working. I haven't seen any of those things in the horses that have been on it, and it's more cost effective than what I was doing before, so I'll stick with it. A person should get a fecal count done if not sure!
Says to give it for 10 days... is that per month or???
I give it every 3-4 months, depending on if they're in the corral or pasture | |
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 Expert
Posts: 5290
     
| want2chase3 - 2017-03-06 12:50 PM
jenagarwood - 2017-03-06 1:44 PM
The same way I knew when a horse was wormy when I used regular wormers--rough hair, pot belly, ribby, poor feed utilization. I have a lot of horses in and out since I train full-time, and it's usually obvious when the worming program isn't working. I haven't seen any of those things in the horses that have been on it, and it's more cost effective than what I was doing before, so I'll stick with it. A person should get a fecal count done if not sure!
Says to give it for 10 days... is that per month or???
Yep, I like SLH so thats the only one I tried. And yes, you give it for 10 days in a row. | |
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 Shelter Dog Lover
Posts: 10277
      
| Mine are slick and shiny, I get compliments on how good they look. I wormed them with Ivermectin and I am seeing dead worms. Vet said to paste them again in 2 weeks. We have had virtually no winter and the type of worms they have thrive in 40 to 80° which is what our last few months have been. | |
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Elite Veteran
Posts: 1094
    Location: Idahome | FLITASTIC - 2017-03-06 12:59 PM jenagarwood - 2017-03-06 11:44 AM The same way I knew when a horse was wormy when I used regular wormers--rough hair, pot belly, ribby, poor feed utilization. I have a lot of horses in and out since I train full-time, and it's usually obvious when the worming program isn't working. I haven't seen any of those things in the horses that have been on it, and it's more cost effective than what I was doing before, so I'll stick with it. A person should get a fecal count done if not sure! I tried Herbal wormers twice and had fecal egg counts done. First time I used it my fecal egg count came back very high. I called company and was told it was doing its job by making the horse get rid of the eggs and worms. I then used a traditional wormer and my egg count came back zero. So does that mean the traditional wormer didnt work??? LOL I will stick to my vets recommendations.
It is possible the paste didn't work. They are meant to kill and the parasites may be harder to evacuate the body when they are dead. I personally use the SLH herbal wormer and love what I see. | |
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