04/17/2026
Rotational grazing helps manage and rid your sheep and goats of this! Along with proper deworming in the beginning until the pasture is rid of the parasite. Rotational grazing is such a big deal! Know your livestock! Sheep graze low against the ground while goats graze on the top. Good rule of thumb, keep your pasture a good 5” tall, rotate lots/fields every two weeks to let the grass grow and rest. For 12 days parasites can come out of the soil but there is nothing grazing there so they don’t have a host!!
Barber Pole Worm in Sheep & Goats — ARTICLE 1
What Barber Pole Worm Actually Is
Most people think of worms as a digestion problem.
Something that causes diarrhea.
Something that lives in the gut.
Something you “clean out.”
That’s not what this is.
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This Is Not a Gut Problem
The Barber Pole Worm — Haemonchus contortus — does not primarily damage the digestive system.
It doesn’t work by irritating the intestines.
It doesn’t need to.
It feeds on blood.
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Where the Name Comes From
If you’ve ever seen one, the name makes sense immediately.
The worm has a distinct twisted appearance:
• a red stripe (blood-filled intestine)
• wrapped around a white reproductive tract
It looks like an old-fashioned barber pole.
That visual isn’t just interesting—it’s a clue.
This is a parasite built around blood feeding and reproduction.
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What It Actually Does
This parasite attaches to the lining of the abomasum (the true stomach) and feeds directly from blood vessels.
Not a little.
Continuously.
Each worm removes a small amount.
But animals don’t carry just one.
They carry:
• dozens
• hundreds
• sometimes thousands
So what you’re seeing is a slow, steady loss of blood happening inside the animal.
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Why That Matters
Most of you know how important blood is:
It carries:
• oxygen
• protein
• nutrients
So when blood is lost, multiple systems start to fail at the same time.
This is why Barber Pole Worm doesn’t look like a typical parasite problem.
You often don’t see explosive diarrhea like you would expect with a typical gut parasite.
You see:
• pale eyelids
• weakness
• bottle jaw (fluid swelling under the jaw)
• animals that just don’t keep up
And sometimes…
You see nothing at all—until it’s too late.
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This Is the Pattern
This is where people get misled.
They’re trained to look for:
• scours
• rough hair coats
• visible illness
But this parasite is designed to work quietly.
By the time you see the problem:
It’s already been happening for weeks.
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Why It’s So Dangerous
Because it doesn’t announce itself.
It doesn’t create obvious early warning signs.
It creates progressive loss:
• less blood
• less oxygen delivery
• less resilience
Until the animal reaches a point where it can’t compensate anymore.
And then it crashes.
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What This Changes
If you understand this one thing:
You are not dealing with a “digestive issue”.
You are managing blood loss.
Everything else in this series will make more sense.
• Why some animals look fine… until they don’t
• Why lambs and kids crash so fast
• Why timing matters more than reaction
• Why some tools work—and others seem to fail
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System-Level Takeaway
You’re not treating a problem—you’re managing a system.
And in this system:
• the parasite removes blood
• the animal tries to compensate
• and your management determines how long that balance holds
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Next Article
Now that you understand what it is, we need to understand how it keeps happening.
Because nothing about this parasite is random.
In the next article, we’ll break down the lifecycle—the engine behind everything—and why the environment matters just as much as the animal.
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Good livestock management isn’t about always having the right answer — it’s about learning how to think when the answer isn’t obvious yet.