imajpm
Well-known member
So I apologize in advance because this will be a little bit long winded due to me being compulsively long winded. Unfortunately I have become a little too familiar with fly strike this past year. I am not including any photos because it really is a horror to see and it is impossible to not recognize on sight.
So I've had 4 strikes occur on two German Angora does. Three strikes on one doe, and one on her daughter. My original herd suffered from genetic urine sludge which I won't get into here. End result being a dozen rabbits with wet urine soaked bottoms which smelled powerfully of rank abnormal smelling urine. That came and went as I did my very best to keep them trimmed enough to keep most of it off of them. I was not terribly successful with that. Regardless of being prime targets for two and a half years with uncontrolled sludge none of them ever attracted any flies. Eventually after trying countless nutritional changes and supplements with poor or no results I was able to get it fully controlled, by accident, with a high fat feed. Purina Show of all things.
Strike one
Not long after all the sludge rabbits, and I had 5 left by then, were nice and dry and no longer producing sludge I had my first fly strike. This was Sept of last year. It occurred on a doe who was just under 3 years of age. So it took several revolting hours to get her sheared down, picked and flushed free of maggots and she fully recovered. She was just a little bit off from time to time after this strike. It was very subtle, came and went, she never went off her feed, never showed any pain postures or behavior, just every now and then she just wasn't quite herself.
Strike two and three
So fast forward to this June. I found some leftover feed in the bowl of the above doe's daughter. I pulled her out looked her over and she had a fly strike. Again, sheared the surrounding area because I recalled how they tried to escape into the wool and hide from last time, picked and flushed until I couldn't find anymore maggots. Then went in, did some hunting on the internet and came across a fly strike spray for sheep. So I made my own with Ivermectin and water, went back out and sprayed that doe's fly strike area thoroughly. I did not find anymore maggots on her the next day so whew.
That same day that Mini proved to be 100% maggot free, her mom, the first doe, had food left in her bowl and that doe never left a scrap ever. Pulled her out, and yep fly strike also, her second one. I had an even bigger problem with this doe though as I was picking and flushing and cursing my life I could see that there were hundreds and hundreds of maggots too small for me to pick manually. So I panicked, grabbed that ivermectim spray and soaked the maggot ridden area. I checked her 4 hours later and all the maggots were dead and most had also fallen off. They had not managed to do much more damage to her after I sprayed them. So I cleaned her up, and she recovered again but healed a bit slower than her daughter. I went over every rabbit in that barn with a fine toothed comb. I sheared all butts and 3 inches above their tails so I could clearly see that area and was on full alert for any more but that was the extent of it. No more strikes.
Strike 4
Aug 18th I found my older doe covered in blood. I could see it soaking the inside of one hind leg and foot. I thought it was maybe an injury, pulled her out but no it was again fly strike, her third, but this time with profuse bleeding. Again on a perfectly clean and dry animal. None are housed with pans, they are all single stack above dry clear ground which I muck out regularly. They have fans for ventilation, there is no detectable odors in there, and I never see any flies. There was no reason for this rabbit to be struck so many times while every other rabbit was ignored, except her daughter.
I trimmed a little to expose the maggots sprayed her down with ivermectin spray. I already knew I was going to euthanize her but I could not do it that very moment and I also couldn't stand to let those things chew on her one moment longer. I euthanized her an hour and a half later, she was one of those, you know, the special ones, the ones that break your heart, but I necropsied her anyway. I found her absolutely riddled with cancer. Uterine cancer that had metastasized to her lungs. A mass on her bladder, lungs so full of masses that they were hard, her heart was rock hard on one side, soft on the other...She was basically the walking dead and I really do hate how rabbits hide things so successfully. I did not expect that from a rabbit whose only unusual behavior was acting a little hot for a few hours when no one else was, and a slightly abnormal gait.
So I am thinking that they are being attracted by the smell of cancer. Dogs can smell it. nurses can smell it, I've even smelled it way back when I was a nurse's aid. That leaves me very concerned about Mini who is the same age as her mom was when first strike happened, the same slight not quite herself but really you could be imagining it behavior..
"sighs" Am I crazy? Has anyone noticed anything at all like this before with fly strikes? Or any sorts of underlying health problems? Arghh.....and may you never even have one in the first place.
Ivermectim spray for fly strike
350ml water in spray bottle. .125 ml 1% injectable ivermectin. Shake well before use. Spray fly strike area including wounds. They should be dead within 1-2 hours and falling off. Pick off remaining maggot corpses. Probably should not use on Dutch, BEW, and VM/VC rabbits.
So I've had 4 strikes occur on two German Angora does. Three strikes on one doe, and one on her daughter. My original herd suffered from genetic urine sludge which I won't get into here. End result being a dozen rabbits with wet urine soaked bottoms which smelled powerfully of rank abnormal smelling urine. That came and went as I did my very best to keep them trimmed enough to keep most of it off of them. I was not terribly successful with that. Regardless of being prime targets for two and a half years with uncontrolled sludge none of them ever attracted any flies. Eventually after trying countless nutritional changes and supplements with poor or no results I was able to get it fully controlled, by accident, with a high fat feed. Purina Show of all things.
Strike one
Not long after all the sludge rabbits, and I had 5 left by then, were nice and dry and no longer producing sludge I had my first fly strike. This was Sept of last year. It occurred on a doe who was just under 3 years of age. So it took several revolting hours to get her sheared down, picked and flushed free of maggots and she fully recovered. She was just a little bit off from time to time after this strike. It was very subtle, came and went, she never went off her feed, never showed any pain postures or behavior, just every now and then she just wasn't quite herself.
Strike two and three
So fast forward to this June. I found some leftover feed in the bowl of the above doe's daughter. I pulled her out looked her over and she had a fly strike. Again, sheared the surrounding area because I recalled how they tried to escape into the wool and hide from last time, picked and flushed until I couldn't find anymore maggots. Then went in, did some hunting on the internet and came across a fly strike spray for sheep. So I made my own with Ivermectin and water, went back out and sprayed that doe's fly strike area thoroughly. I did not find anymore maggots on her the next day so whew.
That same day that Mini proved to be 100% maggot free, her mom, the first doe, had food left in her bowl and that doe never left a scrap ever. Pulled her out, and yep fly strike also, her second one. I had an even bigger problem with this doe though as I was picking and flushing and cursing my life I could see that there were hundreds and hundreds of maggots too small for me to pick manually. So I panicked, grabbed that ivermectim spray and soaked the maggot ridden area. I checked her 4 hours later and all the maggots were dead and most had also fallen off. They had not managed to do much more damage to her after I sprayed them. So I cleaned her up, and she recovered again but healed a bit slower than her daughter. I went over every rabbit in that barn with a fine toothed comb. I sheared all butts and 3 inches above their tails so I could clearly see that area and was on full alert for any more but that was the extent of it. No more strikes.
Strike 4
Aug 18th I found my older doe covered in blood. I could see it soaking the inside of one hind leg and foot. I thought it was maybe an injury, pulled her out but no it was again fly strike, her third, but this time with profuse bleeding. Again on a perfectly clean and dry animal. None are housed with pans, they are all single stack above dry clear ground which I muck out regularly. They have fans for ventilation, there is no detectable odors in there, and I never see any flies. There was no reason for this rabbit to be struck so many times while every other rabbit was ignored, except her daughter.
I trimmed a little to expose the maggots sprayed her down with ivermectin spray. I already knew I was going to euthanize her but I could not do it that very moment and I also couldn't stand to let those things chew on her one moment longer. I euthanized her an hour and a half later, she was one of those, you know, the special ones, the ones that break your heart, but I necropsied her anyway. I found her absolutely riddled with cancer. Uterine cancer that had metastasized to her lungs. A mass on her bladder, lungs so full of masses that they were hard, her heart was rock hard on one side, soft on the other...She was basically the walking dead and I really do hate how rabbits hide things so successfully. I did not expect that from a rabbit whose only unusual behavior was acting a little hot for a few hours when no one else was, and a slightly abnormal gait.
So I am thinking that they are being attracted by the smell of cancer. Dogs can smell it. nurses can smell it, I've even smelled it way back when I was a nurse's aid. That leaves me very concerned about Mini who is the same age as her mom was when first strike happened, the same slight not quite herself but really you could be imagining it behavior..
"sighs" Am I crazy? Has anyone noticed anything at all like this before with fly strikes? Or any sorts of underlying health problems? Arghh.....and may you never even have one in the first place.
Ivermectim spray for fly strike
350ml water in spray bottle. .125 ml 1% injectable ivermectin. Shake well before use. Spray fly strike area including wounds. They should be dead within 1-2 hours and falling off. Pick off remaining maggot corpses. Probably should not use on Dutch, BEW, and VM/VC rabbits.