black bugs

There is a vet that says egg withdrawal time is more than 14 days, and she allegedly got her information from FARAD.


There are many studies and posts that say it will not treat worms in poultry.


How do you know it worked? Did you have before and after fecals done? If not, you'll never know.


I've also had several necropsies done by the state, and none of them revealed any type of parasite, same with most necropsies done here, and the majority of them were *never* de-wormed. So a worm free necropsy doesn't mean that ivermectin worked.

I agree, and would like to see concrete evidence from people that ivermectin in water does treat lice, mites, and all but tapeworms, as well as something about egg and meat withdrawal.

No, I have had local vet test droppings, find worms, then I treated the birds and droppings tested again and no worms. Also, I have found worms in droppings myself. I also have blackhead on the property & it prevented me from keeping turkeys on free range. Since I regularly deworm the flock with ivermectin in the water, I have free ranged my turkeys & not had any incidences of blackhead. I still raise poults on oregano oil in their water because if they get blackhead, they die quickly. Oregano oil prevents blackhead for whatever reason.

Also, I get mites once or twice a year, every year without fail. I find them to be extensive, on many birds because they spread rapidly through my flock. I then treat with ivermectin, nothing else and then I have no mites. I don't need anyone to tell me it does not work because it works for me. I am not disputing that it is not water soluble. However, it seems to mix with the water causing it to be foamy (I put the ivermectin in, then the water.). If it doesn't work for you, then don't use it. My vet told me 14 days withdrawal on eggs and I trust him. I have been using it for more than ten years.

As I indicated, I don't eat the meat of birds I treated. Turkeys to be slaughtered are raised solely on oregano oil in the water.
 
Thanks for the reply. I guess maybe it would be better if you told people that it works for you, but not for others, because like I said before, some studies say it's not an effective poultry anthelmintic, and many people have lost chickens, turkeys, and peafowl thinking it was.

Just to satisfy my curiosity I will find two birds with lice. One I will treat orally with ivermectin, the other I with treat with medicated water. I'll start a thread and tag you when I do so you can see my results. :D

Edited to add:
My vet told me 14 days withdrawal on eggs and I trust him. I have been using it for more than ten years.
Probably best to say this when you talk about withdrawal because different vets and FARAD might suggest something else. :D
 
Also, I get mites once or twice a year, every year without fail. I find them to be extensive, on many birds because they spread rapidly through my flock
Yep, mites and other parasites are part of the environment. And seasonally worse in some areas.

Permethrin spray is safe, affordable, effective, and extremely easy to use. It treat's your external parasites including lice, mites, fleas, mosquitoes and others (not scaly leg or depluming mites as those are systemic and may never crawl to the surface to make contact with the medication) with NO withdrawal time for eggs.

I also would like to see the studies showing withdrawal time for Ivermectin. Yes it may work for some people. It did NOT work for one of my dogs who was struggling with mites in the beginning, even with vet supervision. Sulfur baths were needed. Egg fart smelling pup anyone?! :sick
 
I just looked up my notes, and the one I wrote down says that any dose of ivermectin requires an 8-week withdrawal. However, I found the picture below in this pdf:
https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/50b2/c9d0cda23a1689d0035ee2270a9676ad3214.pdf
ivermectin_residue_1.png
 

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