Quote: I have not used pellets.
I'm using Valbazen this year for worming. I used Ivomec last year because I had a heck of a time ridding my flock of poultry lice. So the Ivomec took care of both problems at once.
Okay what am I missing with the Alfalfa? You are giving them Alfalfa????? Isn't that the dried big rectangle bale of stuff you give horses?
Please forgive my ignorance (yet again) I am not a country girl, however much I would like to be.
Yep, alfalfa. The chickens will scratch through it and get the small green parts. They don't eat the stalks. This time of year at our place, greens are not around. My garden is done, weeds are done, so until it starts raining and the clover comes in, we don't have any greens. Alfalfa is a good source of greens to keep the yolks nice and dark. Kale, chard, clover, etc are as well.
Do you guys have an easy way to give the worming medicine to the chickens? I have the Valbazen and I don't relish the idea of catching each one and forcing it down their throat. Some some to be a little easier to work with some and not so easy. Mine don't seem to like bread.
I do it at night with a headlamp on. I pull them off the roost one at a time. Put the medicine in a medicine syringe (like you use for human babies). Then pull on their wattles and their mouth will open. I squirt it on their right side of their mouth and immediately release their wattles so they can swallow it. I have found that I can hold them against my body and pull on their wattles with one hand and squirt with the other.
I did the bread one year and it was a pain in the butt. The darn rooster kept trying to feed it to everyone else. It is so much easier to do it at night when they are settled, and it's easier to keep track of who has been done. I put them back in the same spot they were in, then grab the next one and work my way down the roost.