I imagine everyones basically heard about the theory about the copper/magnesium thing causing mad cow? What do you think of that theory?
There was an article in the last issue of the Canadian Cattleman that addressed this issue. It seems more scientists are having a serious look at this theory.
Why I wonder if there isn't something to it is a little incident we had on the farm back in the mid 80's.
We had a pen of yearling heifers that we were A.I.ing. Had been on dry feed all winter and spring. One day one of the best started displaying symtoms of what I would say now was BSE. She'd start to shake then stagger and fall down. She only did it occasionally at first. Later she got quit agressive, even trying to bite!
We were trying to get the crop in so we let this go on for a week or so before finally getting the vet out. He concluded she had grass tetany...but she'd never been on green grass! He was baffled and took some blood samples! Sure enough they came back that she was loaded with magnesium! He gave her some itervenious calcium but she was pretty sad by this time. When she tried to get up she would get the shakes and fall back down. My old man always had a solution to every problem...in this case the 22 and a little feast for the coyotes! A couple of years later I had a detailed feed test done and found out our land was very deficient in copper.
Now I don't know if she had mad cow or not but she sure acted just like the film clips I've seen of this. And no, these heifers weren't getting any supplement other than salt and mineral,homegrown barley and hay.
There was an article in the last issue of the Canadian Cattleman that addressed this issue. It seems more scientists are having a serious look at this theory.
Why I wonder if there isn't something to it is a little incident we had on the farm back in the mid 80's.
We had a pen of yearling heifers that we were A.I.ing. Had been on dry feed all winter and spring. One day one of the best started displaying symtoms of what I would say now was BSE. She'd start to shake then stagger and fall down. She only did it occasionally at first. Later she got quit agressive, even trying to bite!
We were trying to get the crop in so we let this go on for a week or so before finally getting the vet out. He concluded she had grass tetany...but she'd never been on green grass! He was baffled and took some blood samples! Sure enough they came back that she was loaded with magnesium! He gave her some itervenious calcium but she was pretty sad by this time. When she tried to get up she would get the shakes and fall back down. My old man always had a solution to every problem...in this case the 22 and a little feast for the coyotes! A couple of years later I had a detailed feed test done and found out our land was very deficient in copper.
Now I don't know if she had mad cow or not but she sure acted just like the film clips I've seen of this. And no, these heifers weren't getting any supplement other than salt and mineral,homegrown barley and hay.
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