I have just dealt with my third iteration of poisoning from buttercups (Ranunculus) in two years, also the most serious so far since I had an almost fully paralyzed, barely breathing hen in my arms for over an hour through the worst of it. I haven't been letting my birds free range lately due to hawks; this most recent case is from a small sprout that came up underneath a windbreak and was just within nibbling range of the edge of the run to be pecked at. I have been very aggressive in removing anything I've IDed as Ranunculus from my main field after my first encounter with a chicken that ate some of it, but the tall buttercups in particular are extremely aggressive and have started taking over some unused, overgrown fields just down the road from me - so new seeds ending up in my field each year seems somewhat inevitable.
Before anyone says "chickens don't eat buttercups," that clearly isn't the case for all species/strains and I found clear proof of my chickens eating one this last time (nibbled sprouts up against my HWC). Maybe young plants don't taste as awful; I have no idea. Whatever species/strain I've got, it seems like my chickens aern't able to figure out that it's nasty until they've fully consumed a small bit of it. When the symptoms do start, the birds first go off food and water. Once the plant is ground up in the gizzard and moving along through the digestive tract, the toxicity hits and the birds go downhill fast. They begin to have minor coordination issues, then it progresses to inability to stand and apparently can go all the way to full paralysis based on this latest case. I still don't know if it's the dehydration from not drinking or some other side effect affecting the gut, but they then end up with a compacted plant matter impaction that has to pass over the next two days. Recovery is a long process that involves a lot of supporive care to get the bird though it. In all three cases, the crop also stopped moving things through until after the paralysis stage so emergincy activated carbon isn't really an option and they just have to try to ride it out.
So, I would really like to find a way to control these nasty plants beyond the yearly manually removal I already do - which is something I can only do once they've grown quite a bit since they are impossible for me to see otherwise. I'm going to try mulching around my runs for immediate control. However, when hawks are less awful, I like to let my birds out for supervised forage time, which has been quite beneficial for rehabillitating the soil on my proprety over the years. The main species I'm dealing with is the tall one, or meadow buttercup, which I also gather is invasive. My field gets mown regularly but I've read that mowing basically does nothing to control buttercups, even the tall species. Other than resorting to herbicides (which I don't really want anywhere on my land), what else will control these things in a grassy field? Are there other species I could be seeding that would somehow outcompete buttercups or stop sprouts from getting a foothold? They seem able to get going mixed in with just about any sort of grass.
Before anyone says "chickens don't eat buttercups," that clearly isn't the case for all species/strains and I found clear proof of my chickens eating one this last time (nibbled sprouts up against my HWC). Maybe young plants don't taste as awful; I have no idea. Whatever species/strain I've got, it seems like my chickens aern't able to figure out that it's nasty until they've fully consumed a small bit of it. When the symptoms do start, the birds first go off food and water. Once the plant is ground up in the gizzard and moving along through the digestive tract, the toxicity hits and the birds go downhill fast. They begin to have minor coordination issues, then it progresses to inability to stand and apparently can go all the way to full paralysis based on this latest case. I still don't know if it's the dehydration from not drinking or some other side effect affecting the gut, but they then end up with a compacted plant matter impaction that has to pass over the next two days. Recovery is a long process that involves a lot of supporive care to get the bird though it. In all three cases, the crop also stopped moving things through until after the paralysis stage so emergincy activated carbon isn't really an option and they just have to try to ride it out.
So, I would really like to find a way to control these nasty plants beyond the yearly manually removal I already do - which is something I can only do once they've grown quite a bit since they are impossible for me to see otherwise. I'm going to try mulching around my runs for immediate control. However, when hawks are less awful, I like to let my birds out for supervised forage time, which has been quite beneficial for rehabillitating the soil on my proprety over the years. The main species I'm dealing with is the tall one, or meadow buttercup, which I also gather is invasive. My field gets mown regularly but I've read that mowing basically does nothing to control buttercups, even the tall species. Other than resorting to herbicides (which I don't really want anywhere on my land), what else will control these things in a grassy field? Are there other species I could be seeding that would somehow outcompete buttercups or stop sprouts from getting a foothold? They seem able to get going mixed in with just about any sort of grass.