Googy pic so you all can remember what they look like

also some pretty chookies
have a nice day chicken folk

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Anniebee mine seem to quite like the fennel tea I've given mine to aid crop digestion. I have since read that it can encourage them to drink as well.
Mine love garlic . Whilst the sulphur is undesirable there is no science to support the idea that it will kill worms. Anthemintics are the only sure fire way to kill intestinal parasites.
Wormers settle in the bottom of the dish and are less effective after 8 hours. It is best to remove water in the evening and replace with fresh made up the next morning.
It is difficult to overdose with fenbendazole , albendazole and levamisole but it is also impossible to judge how much any individual bird might be getting. In small flocks it is far more accurate to dose birds individually than in the water.
Chickens have no heat receptions in their beaks so they can eat the hottest of chillis and curries.
I am not against ' natural ' remedies, but if I see evidence of parasites I reach for the product I know will work . I've seen birds die from worm overload because the owner was led to believe that sprinkling cayenne pepper on the feed would kill roundworm.
In the end it's ' each to their own ' .![]()
We all strive for healthy birds.
Googy pic so you all can remember what they look like
also some pretty chookies
this is my araucana x rooster given the lacing thats come out on his chest since moult and his overall colour i am now assuming hes a silverlaced wyandotte x
very pretty araucana x pullet
Silver laced wyandotte bantam hen
Sparkles The giant Australorp and Archie the polish rooster
pepper the half hearted broody Australorp
phoenix the gold spangled hamburg pullet
Sparkles the Giant Australorp you can see in this pic where her name came from, the sheen on this bird is ridiculous
my eldest with Sparrow my Fave araucana hen
Archie the super handsome Polish Rooster
have a nice day chicken folk![]()
Beautiful photographs - beautiful birds. ....![]()
Fancychooklady .... thank you so much for your response. ...
It answers a great deal for me. Particularly in removing and replacing wormer in water after 8 hours .... means they should get 'fresh' worming mix in water every day for 3 days ?
Now THAT makes sens to me ... even though it results in being expensive ( who cares - they are our beloved chooks ).
If the chooks do not have a taste response to hot chillies etc., then I guess the recipe on that website I posted could do no harm. Might just have the effect of carrying them over, or being like a kind of maintenance to their de-worming. ( much the same as Seretide is for people with asthma, who daily rely mainly on Ventolin ... etc.) .... a maintenance programme ?
Am prepared to try it - not for stopping infestation, but for a 'back-up' for want of a better description. ... Not that I think my girls are infested - they are however, due now for their next
de-worming in water. .... which means getting the measuring tape out to see what the little beggars have done - or not done. ....![]()
Thanks again
Anniebee....![]()
While I have tried to research this question, nothing comes up that adequately answers it..
My girls have gone through / are going through, moults - two of them are producing pin feathers now ( they look ruddy awful ) ... and the 3rd is still casting a few downy feathers, although is a large chicken with plenty of normal feathery cover .. .. as though she is almost finished with the moult business.
I also suspect a couple of 'suspended' moults have happened, over the past months.
None are laying ( not a problem - I understand the moulting situation and its effects metabolically on the girls ).
My little Araucana is impossible to assess as to her rose comb ... is it, or is it not -coming back to colour. ... it seems the normal size.
...............
My two big girls ( Welsummer and RIR ) have combs that are pinkish ( understandable ) but are vastly reduced in size ??? - right down to about 1/3 of an inch. When laying, their combs are so very much larger - and red.
Their bodies are adult ( Molly RIR is looking the worst at present ) .... but their heads look like under pullet sized. .... Such very small combs.
Is this normal ? .... please - anyone.
Anniebee....
I find 2 days ample.Twice a year I steep 3-4 full heads of garlic in water over night after bringing it to the boil . Fill the water dishes and let them at it. (As a preventative measure )
Another way is to put a whole garlic in the leg of an old stocking , smack it with a hammer and tie it off to the wire and leave it hanging in the water dish.![]()
If you decide to add paprika or cayenne pepper , try sourcing it from your local Asian grocery store. They sell it in bulk. I grow my own purple garlic.
Fennel tea ? .... Would never have thought of it ... I figure I spoil my chooks with their minutely cut up goodies ( to assist with their digestion process) ... thanks for the hint.
*sigh* ... will now go buy some fennel tea to add to their increasingly super-duper mash x 4 per week.
As long as it doesn't hurt them - digestion / metabolism wise, it could not hurt - nothing could actually. There are some items that I don't add however e.g. mushrooms and onions.
Finely chopped kale was a big wonder - at first ... but now they tend to ignore it. And there's nothing in preference to it - except maybe cabbage.
( This is the 'in-betweens' during the week ... when they don't have the mash.)
All seem healthy and happy, to date. ... however, I have another question ... which I will separately post.
Cheers ......Anniebee.