Livestock Health And Natural Sunlight On The Animals Skin Natural sunlight is the visible spectrum and Ultra Violet UVA and UVB and Infra Red. Ultra Violet Light Kills Pathogens Natural sunlight on the earths surface is 40% Infra Red. Greenhill Roofing System Three option allow 25%, 50% or 75% of sunlight through them. A fourth option should be added that allows 85% or 90% of sunlight through. The fourth option allowing 85% or 90% of sunlight through would be used in regions like Northern Ireland and Scotland with dense cloud cover reducing the intensity of sunlight. The roofing panels and wall panels in this video that allow natural sunlight to pass through them will have a phenomenal positive impact on the health of livestock in the barn. This also applies to people working in units that have roof panels that allow natural sunlight to pass through them into the working area. The positive health benefits of natural sunlight have been grossly underestimated, this encompasses physical health and mental health. More research must be carried out on the improvement of physical health and mental health on people and livestock when in buildings as above with roof panels and wall panels that allow natural sunlight to pass through them. This especially applies to calves and young children as the importance of natural sunlight on the skin when growing at a young age has been completely misunderstood and grossly underestimated.
@BhupinderSinghEuropewale20 күн бұрын
without paper
@BhupinderSinghEuropewale20 күн бұрын
you work indairy farm me
@BhupinderSinghEuropewale20 күн бұрын
Iam working in dairy farm
@ericdineen484224 күн бұрын
Brillent video nice to see Amy again.
@thatlittlehomesteadАй бұрын
My rescue cat has this he is 14 pounds and has been put on azithromycin 1.3 mg for 6 weeks then he was retested and he still had it now the dr has upped the dose to 2.6mg. His poop still looks and smells like cryptosporidium. I’m at the end of my rope I don’t know what else to do.
@ElliotConlonАй бұрын
my name called Elliot hah and my cousin have a horse but we are seperated to her again ❤❤😂😂
@johnw13473Ай бұрын
If I buy in bulling heifers that don't have johes disease and are from a clean hurd can thay pick it up on my farm ? I've had some cows with it that are going off the farm the new heifers with be kept away from any infected cattle.
@tommythevetАй бұрын
Very low risk John Always need to know much more details before you give an answer Your own vet always best placed for that sort of advice
@charlottepavy5865Ай бұрын
Dear Sir, My name is Lou PAVY, I'm a french student at the Rouen UniLaSalle Veterinary School in FRANCE, and i'm looking for a one-month placement between 15 July and 16 August 2024 on a farm to find out about the job of a farmer-breeder, especially based on the rearing of herbivorous ruminants, preferably dairy cows. As my parents are dairy farmers, I'd like to broaden my horizons and do this experience in Ireland where I've fallen in love with its sumptuous landscapes and its warm, friendly people. I'm very comfortable with all types of animals and can adapt to any type of activity. I can drive tractors and telescopic handlers, as well as cars. Above all, I love learning and being of service ! As information, this internship may be unpaid. I'm very determined, persevering, observant and diligent. My sports (horse riding / dance / kick boxing) and cultural activities and my love of travel have forged my personality and my open-mindedness ; I also adapt very easily within a team. I recently sent a message via Instagram to Mr Christopher Tuffy, dairy farmer in Sligo. As I don't have his direct contact details, I'm still waiting for his reply. If you could get in touch with him to forward my request, I'd be very grateful, as his farm seems to be a perfect match for what I'm looking for. If you know of other farms with this profile in Sligo or surrounds, I would also be grateful if you could provide me with their contact details. I hope to be able to attract your attention Best regards Lou PAVY [email protected]
@Thesheepman4212 ай бұрын
Is there any for sheep 😂
@antokeane2 ай бұрын
Why take the cow away from the calf so early?
@tommythevetАй бұрын
That’s their strategy for disease control limit exposure to maternal pathogens
@Jasonculhaneagri2 ай бұрын
A better version of ear to the ground 🤠
@tommythevet2 ай бұрын
Wait until we do a few more thanks for the feedback Jason
@TomCarey-zc8hb2 ай бұрын
Well Tommy due u have a product in power form for the preservation of silage
@tommythevet2 ай бұрын
No Tom All our products are liquids That’s the best format for microbes It’s ready to use 10 litre
Yes Eoin. Several of the farms who trialled it last year were bales but need a dispenser on the baler
@HadeelAli-mu1wr3 ай бұрын
wow
@stephencrockett12773 ай бұрын
Teeaphoo ❤
@stephencrockett12773 ай бұрын
Got beat betterdays gutted
@yameenkoondhar90503 ай бұрын
Veterinary doctor from Pakistan
@yameenkoondhar90503 ай бұрын
Can I do internship at your under
@caysproductions72454 ай бұрын
Hey Tommy, Tangaroa Walker here from Farm 4 Life. Am I able to use this video for our educational farming app? Cheers
@tonylife79225 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@shreyassn22386 ай бұрын
Thanksss tommy bhai
@Magpie66396 ай бұрын
Not sure I would want my calves turned inside out,better if kept inside in and outside out.
@spoolsandbobbins6 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@JihadFiqadu-nq7ev7 ай бұрын
Lab technique
@pallabsarkar17878 ай бұрын
Wonder ful sir.
@patricklarkin74138 ай бұрын
Thanks very informative 👍
@jamesmoore8690 Жыл бұрын
Hi Tommy, could you put together a video of how the microbiome alters and how the horse is effected during the transition from a high starch/grain diet and minimal roughage to a high fat and high fibre diet, with adequate grain (only oats). Thank you in advance
@tommythevet Жыл бұрын
Hi James great idea …. A little time poor at the moment travelling a lot happy to chat if you email me your number to discuss if that helps [email protected]
@michaelgriffin5301 Жыл бұрын
Great Video, interesting to hear Noel describe himself as a young fella😅. Delighted Noel is on the road to recovery after two extremely difficult years.
@tommythevet Жыл бұрын
Age is but a number Michael 😮 We all want to be young fellas
Can you give that without mixing it with milk .like for suckler calves
@tommythevet Жыл бұрын
Michael can be given orally by syringe to suckler calves or through electrolytes
@normanmaina7091 Жыл бұрын
Are they profitable?
@tommythevet Жыл бұрын
yes they are profitable Seem to have had a very good year So very dependent on milk price and income costs like a lot of indoor systems
@eprohoda Жыл бұрын
hi~Love it~you did cool video-work- have a nice day.Tommythevet! ;))
@normanmaina7091 Жыл бұрын
Excellent training
@bursty2464 Жыл бұрын
This video made my day. Thank you for the info.
@bursty2464 Жыл бұрын
How much are vaccines helpful in this case?
@lifetv7085 Жыл бұрын
The first time I've ever seen anyone use pain relief
@user-rt8mg8ff8q Жыл бұрын
영상과 조언 잘 보고 갑니다. 감사드립니다.
@davidmichelson671 Жыл бұрын
6:08 "I think they're happy" has to be the most disturbing thing I've heard since Adolf Eichmann said that he and the Jews were "pulling together"
@ahmadaliyu12422 жыл бұрын
Thanks for an educative content. Learned a lot. However I think you can work more on your audio and clarity as some words sound gibberish and makes it difficult for me to know what you are saying. Lastly great video and thank you for sharing
@farmstyle92macd552 жыл бұрын
I’ve stared rotational grazing this year and found that having water on the ground doing daily moves has been a life saver.
@meermuhammad63282 жыл бұрын
Sir Every calf have lung worms. what are these problems
@foxp37692 жыл бұрын
Great job!
@foxp37692 жыл бұрын
what kind of worm (nemathod)? is it like the tinea saginata? I am here because o the name "husk" on the series "All Creatures Great and Small" On masterpiece.PBS
@Hooha312 жыл бұрын
Brilliant detailed video
@Willow_and_Sage2 жыл бұрын
I have no idea how I came across this but I am so happy I did!!
@markwinter75112 жыл бұрын
Greetings from south africa and thanks. I farm rangeland beef cattle and have had terrible crypto losses in young calves. What you say about boosting calf immunity is absolutely true and in my opinion is the key to solving this problem. We have made tremendous strides in reducing mortality exponentially and you may find the following useful. 1 High urea/nitrate levels in the feed / blood of cows prior to calving appears to interfere with trace element absorption and thus immune status of the newborn 2 Sulfate based minerals appear to be particularly susceptible to the above and we have had much better results with hydroxy minerals 3 Ensure that calcium phosphate ratios in the pregnant mother are correct and at the same time dont neglect magnesium as without it a cow cannot properly mobilize calcium and this is very detrimental to colostrum and milk. 4 Blood and liver trace element analyses that are sub optimal are invariably a reliable indicator of problems to follow. 5 It is almost impossible to sanitize the post natal environment and the only lasting solution is to solve the immunity / colostral issue. All the best.
@eliakimjosephsophia45422 жыл бұрын
How long has lungworm existed in the UK?
@tommythevet2 жыл бұрын
I’m not exactly sure but intensive systems 1950-60s I’ve read reports,the more grazing the more animals the more we have seen it on farms. I’m based in Ireland
@eliakimjosephsophia45422 жыл бұрын
@@tommythevet I read on-line, I think it was Countryfile that lungworm has only existed in the UK for 40 years and that it is not native from our lands. (although you could be right, that it could've arrived earlier) I'm interested in the subject matter because my puppy caught the fox lungworm, although the other types can be fatal if not caught early enough in dogs. I also read that since the 90s the fox population has decreased and that one in five foxes are infected. My question is how did it arrive in our country if not from abroad? Surely, an infected animal must have brought it in. Although I was also listening to how it can come in on our food. It must be a nightmare for the farmers, how to keep the rats, hedgehogs and foxes off the land where there is livestock. Thank you for sharing how it moves from cow to cow.