Quote:
I have never wormed in the dark, but sure...why not? Wear a headlamp so you can see what you're doing lol.
The thing about adding wormers in water is that you never know how much they drink, therefore you dont know if they drank enough for the wormer to be effective. Some may have drank alot, or others hardly any at all. Also, when temperatures are cool or cold, chickens drink less water and (wormer.)
If you still wish to worm using water...you can buy Safeguard liquid goat wormer (fenbendazole.) Dosage is 3cc per gallon of water. Leave it out for 3 days straight. It must be their sole source of water to drink.
I have never wormed in the dark, but sure...why not? Wear a headlamp so you can see what you're doing lol.
The thing about adding wormers in water is that you never know how much they drink, therefore you dont know if they drank enough for the wormer to be effective. Some may have drank alot, or others hardly any at all. Also, when temperatures are cool or cold, chickens drink less water and (wormer.)
If you still wish to worm using water...you can buy Safeguard liquid goat wormer (fenbendazole.) Dosage is 3cc per gallon of water. Leave it out for 3 days straight. It must be their sole source of water to drink.