The Rural Voice, 1982-03, Page 14Sick cows got you baffled?
by Bev Brown
Any livestock producer who is ex-
periencing strange health problems with
his animals which are difficult, if not
impossible, to cure or explain should find
out if stray voltage is running through his
barns.
Transient hydro, also known as stray
voltage or tingle voltage, is defined as an
intermittent, low-level electrical current
flowing through a building and through
any conductor in that building. It occurs
when the flow of voltage on the neutral
wire is reversed and then grounds through
your equipment -- pipelines, waterbowls.
stabling, etc.
The effect of this stray voltage can be
catastrophic, as Mel Greig, a dairy farmer
at R.R. 1 Gorrie explains. "We have had
problems in our dairy barn for five years
and maybe more. Uneven milkout, hard
quarters, mastitis, Toss of milk and
eventually loss of cows, which we shipped
because we thought their problems were
incurable. Then abortions struck -- twelve
in all -- plus swollen and running hocks.
"Despite intensive investigation by our
local veterinarians, provincial dairy spe-
cialists and the University of Guelph. no
one was able to get to the bottom of our
problems. Everything was checked out
from feed to water, with nothing to explain
the various symptoms. Our milk pro-
duction dropped to the point where I had
to buy extra cows in order to fulfill our
quota. Our BCA count dropped sixteen
points. The cows dried up three to five
months before freshening. Calves and
heifers were stunted in their growth."
By the fall of 1981 Greig felt that he was
coming to the end of his farming career.
Discouraged, but determined, he con-
tinued to read everything he could find on
problems similar to his own. Then he came
across three different articles on transient
hydro and each one described symptoms
he had seen in his own cows. He bought a
volt meter and found measurable voltage
when the leads were attached to the bulk
milk tank and grounded in the milkhouse
drain. This voltage varied at different
times of the day.
"At this point I thought I had found the
cause of all our troubles," Greig explained
"A call to Ontario Hydro brought quick
PG. 12 THE RURAL VOICE/MARCH 1982
Mel Greig, dairy farmer at R.R. 1. Gorrie, bought his own Micronta Digital
Multi -meter so he could keep checking the voltage levels in his barn.
results. The Hydro inspectors came out to
the farm and checked all electrical wiring
and motors to make sure they were
properly installed. Their volt meter still
showed voltage coming through the barn.
so they cut the neutral wire and grounded
the ends separately.
"That was in December, 1981 and
within one month our cows increased their
production ten pounds per cow per day."
Greig said with delight. "The cows drank
more water, ate more feed and cleaned up
their mangers. And suddenly we started
to see heat signs we had never seen in our
years of farming. 1 can list sixteen
problems we had been experiencing and
most of these have vanished."
The Greigs are determined to publicize
their story with the hope that this might
help other livestock producers who are
having similar problems with their
animals.
"This has cost me thousands of dollars
in the past years," Greig says, "and with
these times of troubles and hardships I
would not want to see a farmer put out of
business because of transient hydro. It is
one problem which will not go away by
itself.
"I have to thank Dr. Alex Strong and the
staff at the Wingham Vet Clinic and ,Dr.
Barbara Cameron who previously was at
Wingham for establishing with me the
desire to strive for maximum production
and animal health. Without these goals I
would have given up or been forced out of
business through low production."
Transient voltage is not a new problem.
It was investigated in New Zealand in the
early 1960s and later in the United States.
although data on the significance of this
problem in North America is lacking.
An article entitled "A Review of the
Problems Associated with Stray Voltage in
Dairy Herds" by J. Zdrojewski. D.V.M.
and J. Davidson. D.V.M. was published in
the November 1981 issue of The Bovine
Practitioner. The authors explain why the
cow is far more sensitive to low voltage
currents than dairymen and will be
seriously affected by one to two volts --
which will not even be felt by a person.
The cow is heavier than the human and
has four bare feet on the ground.