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GEDEMARK |
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Elastrator Dehorning of Goats |
By D.J. Gundlock
Mirrored from Goats Canada with permission of D.J. Gundlock.
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Three month old Boer cross buck: horn
base has been shaved with electric clippers and the dark line is drawn on
to show where the skin intersects with the horn. This band is perfectly
placed, as it is "hooked" beneath the base of the horn and sunken into the
soft tissue. |
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Side view of the same buck above. I
had drawn a red line to show the proper placement of the band, but covered
it up with the band. That is the faint red showing under the green. This
band is not likely to slip or be rubbed
off. |
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Horns laid back in final stage before
detaching. |
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Different view of same doeling. Note
that the elastrator band has almost returned to normal size, about 25% of
the horn width. |
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One down - one
left to go. On the brown buck, there is a triangle where the horn was.
Below and to the front of that is a glossy area that is actually dried
blood from the horn detaching. |
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Same buck as above, with a good
example of the clotted blood on top of the head where horn
detached. |
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The horn base has
detached, with the horn rocking backward to expose the
base. |
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The largest set of horn removed with
bands, from a 2 year old Alpine cross
doe. |
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A four year old Pygmy
Doe. |
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Same doe from above. Note how the
left horn has tilted backward but the right horn has flattened in
thickness, and also rotated prior to falling
off. |
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Failure: this doeling shows two
common failures. Horn on the right had band rubbed off. Horn on left had
band applied too high, allowing horn growth to continue. Solution: shave
base, reband and apply tape across bands to prevent
rubbing. |
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From base measured up the front of the horn to the tip, Horn #1 measured 8.75" and shows the hollowness of a typical large horn. Horn #2 is 6.75 inches and clearly shows the elastrator still embedded in horn, with blood and vessel clotting on the inside. Horn #3 is 5.5 inches and shows how a horn will "deflate" and collapse onto itself prior to detaching. Horn #4 is 3.75 inches and was a pliable horn on a young goat, that actually pinched the outside edges of the horn together while detaching. |
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Another view: Horns #1 and #3 have sharp edge where they torn / detached from the skull. Horn #2 with the elastrator highlight for viewing. Horn #4 shows another example of blood clotting, filling in the hollow portion of the horn, as the soft out covering of the horn was actually pinched together into the middle. |
Important
This information is provided as a service and made available by Idea Factory, Inc.. The text description and the photo illustration pages are meant to be used together. Neither Idea Factory, Inc. nor Goats Canada nor the author (D.J. Gundlock) is responsible for any damage, injury, death, etc from the use, misuse, or accuracy of this information.
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