BYC Café

Thanks IM for coffee, much appreciated and needed this am.
I am feeling like I just got my vent handed to me on BYC. Could be over reacting but it is time for coffee and a cafe smile.


Prayers for you and your medical team @007Sean .
About the scaly leg mites?

People are weird. Leg mites are treated with thick oil. In Texas coconut oil might not be heavy enough. The castor oil looks like a good idea. Vaseline is traditionally used

Because scaly leg mites are not blood feeders and live off of the dead skin, you can not use systemic poison like ivermectin. Permetrhrin can't get to them because they are up in the scales.

Allergies? Not likely. Ignore the weirdos and keep using the heavy oil. I read a UCD mite paper and it said that is the best treatment. You have to do this for a long time and watch the other flock members for symptoms too.
 
I have been putting bag balm on him weekly for 4 months. I thought a thinner oil might get in between the feathers if I wasn't getting it with the balm. The suggestion that I am seeing a problem that isn't there because I did/do not know enough to about healthy legs kinda makes me hopeful that I am seeing a natural hormone aged leg and I tried to google it, but all I can find is leg mites or growth hormones :th
nothing about natural red lines on rooster legs. Oh maybe I should just google that!

BRB ;)
 
I have been putting bag balm on him weekly for 4 months. I thought a thinner oil might get in between the feathers if I wasn't getting it with the balm. The suggestion that I am seeing a problem that isn't there because I did/do not know enough to about healthy legs kinda makes me hopeful that I am seeing a natural hormone aged leg and I tried to google it, but all I can find is leg mites or growth hormones :th
nothing about natural red lines on rooster legs. Oh maybe I should just google that!

BRB ;)
Some breeds do get lines. It usually shows up when younger though.

I will attach the UCD mite paper as a pdf. It has a lot of information about lice and mites. This is from the leg mite section:

Leg Mites.JPG
 

Attachments

  • UCD Mite paper.pdf
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@ronott1 could it be he turned red leg for mating season and it was more apparent this year because this past fall the dominant rooster in my coop died. Until then Lulu was submissive and stayed mostly in the background. It took him a while to convince the hens they could trust him to be in charge. Some still don't. But this is his first year of no fear mating.
 
@ronott1 could it be he turned red leg for mating season and it was more apparent this year because this past fall the dominant rooster in my coop died. Until then Lulu was submissive and stayed mostly in the background. It took him a while to convince the hens they could trust him to be in charge. Some still don't. But this is his first year of no fear mating.
It could very well be that!

None of the others in your flock has an issue? They would get it too especially if he is mating them
 
He is the only one and he is eating drinking dating and mating.
Even suspecting now a hormonal change it is hard to find anything that doesn't go to leg mites.

@ronott1 :oldThank you wise one!

I will get Vaseline and try that since it won't hurt him but I am really thinking now hormonal. Thank you thank you Thank You!
He will love the attention!
 

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