An animal only needs to be drenched or tubed when it is very sick and cannot eat properly. Calves are drenched with colostrum or milk when they are too weak to suckle; older cattle are drenched with electrolytes to help with digestion, or with mineral oil if they have a bad case of bloat.
how often do you drench cattle
Drenches should ONLY be given to cows that are sick, cannot eat or are bloated. A mineral oil drench is given to cattle that are bloated, and a drench containing electrolytes are given to cattle that have severe diarrhea or at the point where they will not eat. DO NOT give drenches to cattle that do not need it!!!
Calves only need to be drenched if they are needing it, like if they have severe scours or are too sick to eat. You will need to drench them as often as what the instructions say on the label of the formula you are drenching the calf with.
Neither. Drench is a verb.
Drench is a verb.
The joke "What do you eat with a wet burger? Drench fries!" is a play on rhyming words. The word drench rhymes with french, and drench means to soak.
Steven Drench was born on 1985-09-11.
To drench means to flood with water, put out in context is to extinguish.
drench
Drench
The answer is the monsoon. Monsoon was a seasonal rains that would drench India every spring.
The Drench is usually in a liquid form and is applied via a small pipe or devices that sends the 'drench' down the throat. So through the mouth or nostril. Drenches are to prevent illnesses, kill off certain bacterias and to improve the health of your horse.