Barnevelder breeders lets work together and improve the breed

In the SOP the breed description does mention two colors: double laced partridge and stippled partridge. The SOP points out that the double laced is more popular. The "ideal" color description is for a double laced...not stippled partridge. That's why I assumed that the accepted color is double-laced. It also says that "peppering" would be considered a fault. "Stippled" would have a lot of "peppering" right?

Trisha
 
Hi everyone: I have a worming question.
I have never wormed my egg layers. I have 9 hens, a colorful mixed flock. I have never wormed them because I sell the eggs. They are 5 to 6 years old now. What should I worm them with? I saw an ad for a product that worms naturally and wouldn't stop the eggs from being eaten. Does it work? Verm-X?
These girls do get an hour each night out of the pen to forage and scratch around in the weeds. The laying is pretty good for old gals. Out of the 9, I usually get 5 or 6 eggs per day. What to do??? I tried pumpkin seeds. They didn't like them.
Aya

I'm so far behind on my threads it isn't even funny and still have about 10 pages or so to catch up on this one but I wanted to quickly address this in case no one else did yet. If you go to Facebook and The Chicken Group, I wrote a paper on Worming that is fairly extensive and should answer your questions.

God Bless,
 
Hi Royce

I don't have facebook is there another way to look at your worming paper. I have some pour on Ivermectin and want to know how to dose my birds with this, I would like to add it to waterer if possible so I don't have to catch them all for topical treatment. Also want to know about holding back eating eggs after treatment. Right now only my older pullets and my barred rock hens are laying so I think it is a good time to treat them as far as eggs go.

Andy
 
From what I heard but I have not verified, Ivermectin is the same medicine used on humane for worms so trace amounts in the eggs is supposed to be safe. However, Ivermectin is poisonous to dogs so it is not recommended to feed dogs eggs with traces of it.

I followed the two week rule because I heard if the birds do have worms, you may find a worm in the egg. If I ever found a worm in an egg, I doubt I could eat them ever again. That would be such a turn off
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I like to use Ivermectin to handle mites, as I have never seen any evidence of worms.
 

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