[AccessD] Looking for easy form solution

FW Salato Center Salato at ky.gov
Sat Oct 24 11:59:41 CDT 2015


I really botched that up -- the phone rang and I forgot where I was -- sorry. What I was trying to say in the first paragraph regarding terminology... 

For instance, the vet might collect a single fecal sample for testing -- no way to tell which deer it's from. All testing and results are applied to all the stock. If she finds worms, they're all treated. However, an individual might sustain an injury and need treatment or surgery. They're all still individuals. 

Susan H. 



The use of flocks and herds is strictly livestock terminology for the discussion. They're all individuals. However, when a species is all housed together in the same exhibit, such as the deer, bison, elk, box turtles, quail, turkey... most procedures will be performed on all at the same time. For instance, the vet might collect a single fecal sample for testing -- no way to tell which deer it's from, and They're still all individuals and a parent, not a child to the flock or herd. But,  I'm not sure I understood your question, so maybe I didn't answer it either. :) 

However, I have considered breaking the rules a bit where the quail are concerned. Right not they're not banded and we probably won't do so. The problem with some animals -- like the quail -- they are too timid for the banding process. It will cause them more stress than it's worth to track them. However, we do want to keep some kind of info on them, even if it's just to say, "Removed two dead; added two females, current stock is now 14" or "One female appears in poor health; will keep an eye on her and remove if no improvement" in a comments field.  

So, I am considering adding the term flock as a name, ided by species and then updating the entire flock that way, since we won't be iding them as individuals. It's not exactly "right" but would work because in this case, we would never be tracking a treatment to an individual because we can't id them as individuals to track! :) 

Susan h. 
Do Flocks and Herds vis a vis their individual animal constituents act like parent and children in the sense that a parent has many children but the children will only ever have one parent (you know what I mean, all Access children are raised by single parents).


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