Hummers Homestead Alpacas

Hummers Homestead Alpacas See Pinned Post for information

05/18/2026

Hello Farm friends!

I hope you are eating well!

Today is our first day at the Butler Flea Market!

Wish us luck, or even better, stop by and say hello!

Just a lazy afternoon.  Sitting in the shade watching..second pict 24 hrs later.  Winds picking up....
05/03/2026

Just a lazy afternoon. Sitting in the shade watching..

second pict 24 hrs later. Winds picking up....

04/20/2026
04/19/2026

Barber Pole Worm in Sheep & Goats —
ARTICLE 2

The Lifecycle: The Engine Behind Everything

Most parasite problems feel random.

Animals are fine… until they’re not.
You treat… and it comes back.

That only feels random if you don’t understand the lifecycle.



This Is Not a One-Time Event

Haemonchus contortus is not something that “shows up.”

It is something that is constantly cycling between:

* the animal
* the environment
* and back again

If you don’t understand that cycle, nothing else will make sense.



Step 1 — Eggs Leave the Animal

Adult worms live in the abomasum and lay eggs.

Those eggs:

* pass out in manure
* land directly onto pasture

At this point, nothing is infective yet.

This is just the beginning.



Step 2 — Eggs Hatch (L1 Stage)

If conditions are right, the eggs hatch into L1 larvae.

L1 are:

* microscopic
* active
* feeding

They feed on bacteria in the manure.



What L1 Needs

* moisture — without it, they dry out and die
* moderate temperatures — not extreme heat or cold
* manure environment — this is their food source

Manure isn’t just waste—it’s a nursery.



Step 3 — Growth (L2 Stage)

L1 develop into L2 larvae.

L2 are:

* still feeding
* still dependent on moisture
* still living in or near manure

This stage is about growth and preparation.



Step 4 — Infective Stage (L3)

L2 develop into L3 larvae.

This is the stage that changes everything.



L3 Are Different

L3:

* do not feed
* are encased in a protective sheath
* are built for survival, not growth



What L3 Are Waiting For

They are waiting to be eaten.

That’s their entire purpose.



What L3 Need to Survive

* moisture (dew, rain, humidity)
* protection (shade, grass, manure microclimates)
* time

They move:

* out of manure
* onto grass blades

using moisture as a film to travel.



How L3 Reach the Animal

L3 larvae don’t just appear on grass.

They rely on moisture—dew, rain, humidity—to move out of manure and onto vegetation.

Without that moisture, they stay lower in the environment and are less likely to be consumed.



Most larvae are concentrated closer to the ground, especially near where manure is present.

But with enough moisture, they can move higher on the plant than people expect.



This Is the Critical Point

This is the infective stage.

If an animal eats L3, the cycle continues.

If not:

* they eventually die
* but not as quickly as people think



How Long L3 Can Survive

L3 are not built to grow—they are built to last.

Under favorable conditions:

* they can survive for weeks to months

That depends on:

* moisture
* temperature
* protection (shade, manure, grass cover)



In hot, dry conditions:

* survival drops off quickly

But in cooler, moist environments:
they can persist much longer than most people expect.



How Fast This Happens (The Part That Surprises People)

Under the right conditions:

* Egg to L3 can happen in as little as 4–7 days

That means:

* warm temperatures
* consistent moisture
* active manure environment



If conditions are poor:

* it can take weeks
* or fail completely



This Is Why It Feels Unpredictable

Because it’s not running on a fixed timeline.

It’s running on:

* weather
* moisture
* environment

A week of rain can do more than a month of dry weather.



Step 5 — Back Into the Animal

When L3 are ingested:

* they enter the digestive system
* shed their protective layer
* develop into adults in the abomasum

Then:

* they attach
* feed on blood
* and begin producing eggs



This Is the Engine

Egg → L1 → L2 → L3 → Animal → Egg

Over and over.



Why Treatment Alone Fails

If you only focus on the animal:

* you kill the worms inside
* but the pasture is still contaminated

So what happens next?

They get reinfected.



A Quick Reality Check About Confinement

This is where people get tripped up.

No pasture does not mean no problem.



In confinement:

* there is no grass for larvae to climb
* but manure is still present
* and moisture still exists



That means:

* eggs are still shed
* larvae can still develop
* and animals can still ingest them



How Reinfection Happens Without Grass

Instead of grazing, exposure happens through:

* contaminated bedding
* feed areas
* water sources
* high-traffic manure zones



What Changes (and What Doesn’t)

What changes:

* distribution of larvae
* how animals encounter them

What does not:

* the lifecycle
* the cycle itself



You did not remove the cycle—you changed where it happens.

Changing the environment changes the pattern—but it does not remove the system.



System-Level Takeaway

You are not fighting worms.

You are interacting with a cycle that depends on environment, timing, and animal exposure.

Break the cycle in the right place, and pressure drops.

Ignore it, and it builds.



Next Article

If this cycle is always running, then the obvious question is:

Why does it come back after winter?

In the next article, we will look at how this parasite survives the cold—and why it returns even when you think it should not.



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.

04/19/2026
04/18/2026
04/18/2026

This looks like pretty good info

04/16/2026
Check this out.  My neice and new little one.  Also if you are looking for fresh veggies all season check them out.  Sli...
04/16/2026

Check this out. My neice and new little one. Also if you are looking for fresh veggies all season check them out. Slippery Rock PA with delivery/pick up in Pittsburgh area.

Address

184 Edmonson Ranch Road
McDade, TX
78650

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