- Sep 7, 2010
- 739
- 22
- 121
I would definitely worm everybody else to be on the safe side and rule that out.
Agree, seems that if the chickens eat off the ground it is a question of how many worms they have rather than if they have them or not. You don't need to see worms in the poop for them to be infested either. Most can live with a few worms but sometimes they become too much.
Worms are smarter than we give them credit for, they need their host so tend not to kill the host. Though sometimes they weaken the host so much something else takes hold.
The piperazine will get the first batch of round worms, then follow up 1-2 weeks later with a broad spectrum wormer, I like fenbendazole (though I never personally tried it myself at least intentionally)
Agree, seems that if the chickens eat off the ground it is a question of how many worms they have rather than if they have them or not. You don't need to see worms in the poop for them to be infested either. Most can live with a few worms but sometimes they become too much.
Worms are smarter than we give them credit for, they need their host so tend not to kill the host. Though sometimes they weaken the host so much something else takes hold.
The piperazine will get the first batch of round worms, then follow up 1-2 weeks later with a broad spectrum wormer, I like fenbendazole (though I never personally tried it myself at least intentionally)