Oh yes. That is the plan. They make light work of poison ivy. We only have 4 very young goats right now, but as they grow and reproduce it will be quite the mowing crew.
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Oh yes. That is the plan. They make light work of poison ivy. We only have 4 very young goats right now, but as they grow and reproduce it will be quite the mowing crew.
So will you have problems with the oil of the poison ivy getting on the hair of the goats and then transferring it to you? That was part of my problem was getting the oil transferred from a dog.
My understanding is that it can be a problem. We will just have to be careful until they knock it down.
There is that expensive wash that's supposed to neutralize the oil, I had a pharmacy at one time and we never had anyone come and buy it. We are in an area that is pretty much corn/soy fields and price of farmland is high so farmers are taking out the old farm house groves and such
You can also make a remedy from jewel weed I believe. It is supposed to be nature's antidote for poison ivy.
In fact I believe @mericanhomestead posted a video on it. I lost internet for a while and forgot to go back and watch it.
I have dairy goats and poison ivy. It is a problem and I used to use zanfel but after a few bouts on my face (and around my eyes) my wife found a great video where the guy compares a bunch of products and found that with soapy water and a washcloth, washcloth is the key (think motor oil). NO MORE ISSUES or fear for me
How about that. Good old fashioned soapy water and a good scrubbin'. Thanks for the tip!
I was very skeptical and have a cupboard full of tecnu, calamine, etc. was shocked when after the washcloth trick all i got was a few bumps here and there. I did kneel down in some while fencing that I didn't scrub and that was bad but thats where the zanfel comes in. Very expensive ($35 for 1 ounce) with some complicated directions but it removes the oil subdermally so rash and itch goes bye bye instantly so totally worth it to me.