Your BarnNo More Flies
Edited from an article by Cherry Hill copyright 2007 www.horsekeeping.com
If you look in your favorite equine supply catalog, you could find up to 15 pages of fly control products! During fly season, the shelves of your local feed or tack store will display a myriad of insecticides, repellents, flytraps, baits, and masks. The choices for fly control products can be overwhelming. However, if you arm yourself with some basic fly facts and gain an appreciation for the importance of management, you’ll have a better chance of winning your war against flies. Stable flies, horseflies, deerflies, horn flies, and face flies are a menace to your horse’s health and well-being. Stable flies, by far the most common, are the same size as a house fly but while house flies just feed on garbage and spread filth, stable flies (both males and females) suck your horse’s blood. Common feeding sites include the lower legs, flanks, belly, under the jaw, and at the junction of the neck and the chest. When stable flies have finished feeding, they seek shelter to rest and digest.
The bite of a blood-sucking fly is painful and some horses have such a low fly tolerance that they can be driven into a snorting and striking frenzy or an injurious stampede. Even fairly tough horses, subjected to a large number of aggressive stable flies, might spend the entire day stomping alternate legs which can cause damaging concussion to legs, joints, and hooves, and result in loose shoes, and loss of weight and condition.
Stable flies breed in decaying organic matter. Moist manure is a perfect medium. The life cycle is 21 to 25 days from egg to adult. A female often lays twenty batches of eggs during her thirty-day life span. Each batch contains between 40-80 eggs. When the eggs hatch, the adult flies emerge ready to breed. The number of flies produced by one pair of adults and their offspring in thirty days is a staggering figure in the millions. That’s why fly prevention is the most important line of defense in your war against flies.
Proper manure management and moisture control are the two biggest factors in preventing flies from breeding. Remove manure and wasted feed daily from stalls and pens and either spread it thinly to dry or compost it. Manure production on even the smallest horse farm requires constant attention.
There are basically three methods. All begin with daily collection. Once the manure is collected, it can be hauled away, spread immediately on a pasture or field, or stored for later distribution. Some refuse collection services are specially designed to handle manure or are willing to haul it away with other trash. If manure is to be spread daily, it must be distributed thinly and harrowed to encourage rapid drying via the air and sun, thus eliminating favorable conditions for parasite eggs and fly larvae.
The most common method of dealing with manure is daily collection and storage for later spreading. Composting reduces bulk, concentrates nutrients, and the fermentation process encourages the manure to release its nitrogen that diminishes odor and makes the manure more pleasant to handle. The end product of composting is humus, a dark, uniform, finely textured, odorless product that is valuable as a soil conditioner and additive.
The process of decomposition of a manure pile can take anywhere from two weeks to three months or more and the quality of the resulting product will vary. Managing a pile properly will kill the parasite eggs and larvae, prevent flies from breeding, and result in a good quality fertilizer. To this end, it is best to have three manure piles: one ready to spread, one in the process of decomposing, and one to which fresh manure is being added daily.
Moisture should be controlled in all areas in and around the barn. Rake around feeders and waterers every day removing the moist feed that has been dropped. Pick up grass clippings, keep grass and weeds mowed, and pick up trash regularly. Be sure there is proper drainage in all stalls, pens, paddocks, and pastures. Repair leaking faucets, hydrants, hoses, and waterers. Eliminate wet spots in stalls and pens by clearing the bedding away, liming the stall floor, and letting the ground dry out. Barn designs that allow sunshine to dry the floors are best. Proper air circulation (via natural wind flow or fans) is essential. If possible have an extra stall or pen so you can rotate a horse out of his regular stalls for a day or two each month to let his stall dry.
TO PREVENT THE LARVAE FROM HATCHING
Feed-Through Oral Larvicide
Fly Predators
TO CAPTURE ADULT FLIES IMMEDIATELY AFTER HATCHING
Flytraps that utilize attractants can capture thousands of flies. Some systems utilize muscalure, a sex attractant (pheromone) to draw the flies. Others require the addition of fish or meat. These traps, commonly used with a 1 or 2 1/2 gallon jar, can be smelly and must be emptied, then restocked. Disposable traps are available for 1/5 the price of the jar traps. They are designed to be used with the supplied sex attractant and water and claim to hold 10,000 flies.
Flypaper is available in strips of several widths. Some are designed to hang from the ceiling while others are to be tacked across doorways or aisles. Some contain sex attractants, others are merely sticky. A few brands contain insecticides, so it is important to read the label if you plan to use them around food or animals. Flypaper is generally an inexpensive, disposable way of mechanically catching flies.
TO KILL THE REMAINING FLIE
FLY ZAPPERS
INSECTICIDES
What type and brand of insecticide will work best for you will depend on your weather, fly problem, style of management, and each horse’s sensitivity. Finding the best insecticide involves a certain amount of testing for effectiveness and allergic reactions (both human and horse). Equine insecticides generally fall into one of four categories: pyrethrins (“natural” insecticides), permethrins (synthetic pyrethrins), carbamates, and organophosphates….listed in order from least toxic to most toxic and from least long-lasting to most long-lasting. Insecticides are available in many forms for various applications.
Topical sprays can be purchased in ready-to-apply forms or concentrates that are usually diluted in a 1:7 ratio of insecticide to water for houseflies or a stronger mix for other flies. Certain general livestock sprays are not safe for use on horses.
Foggers are disposable cans of insecticide designed for the interior of buildings. To use a fogger, close all doors, set the can to spray automatically until empty, keep the doors closed for 15 minutes, then ventilate the building. Automatic misters are available in several types. The disposable type uses an aerosol can set in a battery-operated automatic spray unit that delivers a spray every 15 minutes and lasts for about a month. A unit is required for every 6000 square feet.
Electric fogger/misters are available for about five times the price. Instead of using aerosol cans of insecticide, the electric misters have a reservoir that can be filled with a chosen solution. Barn-wide automatic mister systems are incorporated in some large barns. Since flies tend to congregate in certain places during certain times of the day, an effective use of misters is to aim them at the resting places and be sure they are functioning during fly siesta time.
IMPREGNATED STRIPS
FLY BAIT (POISON)
TO PROTECT YOUR HORSE
REPELLENTS
FLY MASKS
FLY STRIPS AND TAGS
—
Farnam Horse Products manufactures a variety of different fly sprays, feed thru products, fly masks, baits, traps and commercial strength insecticides. For more information go to www.farnamhorse.com 800-234-2269
Predator files can be purchased from the following retailers: Related posts:
|
|||||||||||||||||
Discussion
No comments for “No More Flies”
Post a comment