oohmydog 82 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 I have got my vasectomised hob in with my Jill's and for over a week he is continuously on one of the Jill's to the extent it is bleeding all the time it shows no intrest in the other jills although they are in season,its my first time with a vesected hob should i take him out or just let him get on with it Atb Quote Link to post
The one 8,467 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 If hes marking up or cutting a jill you got to take her out and give her a break Quote Link to post
ade33uk 86 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 Take the jill out would be best for now I think , he still has to take the others out of seasomn .. Quote Link to post
ferrety f 23 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 I would cage him alone and put the jills in with him one at a time, then he will do them all Quote Link to post
oohmydog 82 Posted March 22, 2011 Author Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 How long should the Jill's be in season with a vasectomised hob in with them do they stay in season for a while or come straight out of season was he has mated them ? Quote Link to post
ferrety f 23 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 How long should the Jill's be in season with a vasectomised hob in with them do they stay in season for a while or come straight out of season was he has mated them ? Make sure the jill is fully swollen then another few days after before putting her in with the hob, leave her in for a day unless he is really damaging her. You should notice her vulva reducing in size in about a week. Quote Link to post
moocherboi 8 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 hi, my hob tends to favour one jill. always pulling her around and covering her. so to stop this i now keep my hob seperate and just put one jill in at time. find this is best. hope this is of some help to you. also i would make sure you keep the jills neck clean and maybe put some cream on it to stop infection.. Quote Link to post
oohmydog 82 Posted March 22, 2011 Author Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 Cheers for the replies had ferrts 40 years and this one is a new to me ,i thought that once the hob had mated them they came out of season so he would not bother them again [if they were,nt in season he would not be interested in them]my last 3 jills never got mated and all died in there 9th year and worked all there lives is it worth it 9 is a good year for a ferrt they never got infections through being swollen or had any aliment Quote Link to post
Kay 3,709 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 the females need to be ready to be brought out of season without them getting sore bloody necks .. usually the reason for neck wounds is because the Jills struggling to get way from the hobs advances .. so he grabs at her repeatedly.. When a Jills ready she will not struggle & should not have any more than a slightly wet neck where the hobs held her .. if she is ready she shouldnt need more than half a day in with him .. leaving them for days & weeks will probably mean she will get a sore neck Cant see the point in leaving them longer than they need :thumbs: Quote Link to post
theferreter 311 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 keep the hob on his own and leave each jill with him for a full day if they are fully in season then the job should be done Quote Link to post
russellpt6 5 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 the females need to be ready to be brought out of season without them getting sore bloody necks .. usually the reason for neck wounds is because the Jills struggling to get way from the hobs advances .. so he grabs at her repeatedly.. When a Jills ready she will not struggle & should not have any more than a slightly wet neck where the hobs held her .. if she is ready she shouldnt need more than half a day in with him .. leaving them for days & weeks will probably mean she will get a sore neck Cant see the point in leaving them longer than they need :thumbs: Actually its the violent neck grabbing that stimulate the Jill to drop her eggs and thus takes her out of season. Something similar is a cats penis with the barb on it. That does the same job. Quote Link to post
ferrety f 23 Posted March 22, 2011 Report Share Posted March 22, 2011 keep the hob on his own and leave each jill with him for a full day if they are fully in season then the job should be done think thats what i said a few posts ago Quote Link to post
johnrthrfrd 223 Posted March 23, 2011 Report Share Posted March 23, 2011 the females need to be ready to be brought out of season without them getting sore bloody necks .. usually the reason for neck wounds is because the Jills struggling to get way from the hobs advances .. so he grabs at her repeatedly.. When a Jills ready she will not struggle & should not have any more than a slightly wet neck where the hobs held her .. if she is ready she shouldnt need more than half a day in with him .. leaving them for days & weeks will probably mean she will get a sore neck Cant see the point in leaving them longer than they need :thumbs: :clapper: :clapper: Quote Link to post
Kay 3,709 Posted March 23, 2011 Report Share Posted March 23, 2011 the females need to be ready to be brought out of season without them getting sore bloody necks .. usually the reason for neck wounds is because the Jills struggling to get way from the hobs advances .. so he grabs at her repeatedly.. When a Jills ready she will not struggle & should not have any more than a slightly wet neck where the hobs held her .. if she is ready she shouldnt need more than half a day in with him .. leaving them for days & weeks will probably mean she will get a sore neck Cant see the point in leaving them longer than they need :thumbs: Actually its the violent neck grabbing that stimulate the Jill to drop her eggs and thus takes her out of season. Something similar is a cats penis with the barb on it. That does the same job. if it were that simple then every one would just '' violently'' grab there jills round the neck.. job done Quote Link to post
Jamie m 668 Posted March 23, 2011 Report Share Posted March 23, 2011 the females need to be ready to be brought out of season without them getting sore bloody necks .. usually the reason for neck wounds is because the Jills struggling to get way from the hobs advances .. so he grabs at her repeatedly.. When a Jills ready she will not struggle & should not have any more than a slightly wet neck where the hobs held her .. if she is ready she shouldnt need more than half a day in with him .. leaving them for days & weeks will probably mean she will get a sore neck Cant see the point in leaving them longer than they need :thumbs: Actually its the violent neck grabbing that stimulate the Jill to drop her eggs and thus takes her out of season. Something similar is a cats penis with the barb on it. That does the same job. if it were that simple then every one would just '' violently'' grab there jills round the neck.. job done That would be handy kay ,? Friction on a very sensitive are ie a vulva the size of a grape, mate of myne had a frustrated jill last season and she would hold and mount one or two jills she took a fancy to and actually brought them out of season, saw it myself a handy jill to have about only thing she couldn't bring herself out she looked very hob like for a jill and I raised the question could she be hermafrodite , Quote Link to post
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