- Thread starter
- #21
Chicken teen618
Songster
- Feb 17, 2019
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What brand of top soil did you guys buy? 

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How did you do the surgery? Put chicken to sleep? Wow, impressive! You Tube video worthy. So glad your girl is mending.A few weeks ago, my Speckled Sussex developed an impacted crop.
I took her to the vet.
They gave her fluids, but refused to do anything else unless I agreed to a $300 x-ray. So, we were sent home with a bottle of antibiotics, a $145 bill and instructions to bring her back in another 10 days for a follow up.
It got worse, despite the crop massages, antibiotics, etc...
After 6 days, my friend and I operated on her - I had no choice really. She was lethargic, her crop was enormous and I couldn't find a vet willing to just perform the surgery.
I had expected to find a huge wad of grass in her crop; instead we spent over an hour squeezing and scooping more than 3 cups of sand from her crop.
I'm on clay, have hardwood mulch in their run, but had put a kiddy pool with play sand in it for their dust baths. She obviously, for whatever reason (they have continuous access to layer pellets, grit and oyster shell), was eating the sand.
Anyway, I pulled the sand out of the run and she's on the mend.
I’ve had good luck keeping roost mites and chicken mites under control during winter. I put a plastic tote bin inside the coop and filled it to halfway with clean sand and wood ash mixed together.So, I gather that I can probably add things to the holes the girls have excavated in several places? They are even bathing in the moist soil right now. Wondering if they'll try dust bathing with the snow about to fall this week. I have some leftover product called Cimexa, which originally is for bedbugs, and kills them better than DE. I am thinking of treating all the cracks of the coop. Should work for the mites, you think? I have DE in there now. How often do you dust for mites, and worm the girls? What do you use for worming?
Do you use the soap full strength? I would use the Cimexa just to dust the coop cracks because it is not good to breathe in, and can be drying to skin. After all, it is a dessicant. Thanks for your info!I’ve had good luck keeping roost mites and chicken mites under control during winter. I put a plastic tote bin inside the coop and filled it to halfway with clean sand and wood ash mixed together.
I googled Cimexa which is silicon dust. I guess you could use it in place of ash.
If the chickens don’t figure out to use their dust bin, I place each chicken in it and pour a handful of sand+ash over her backside.
Then I took a damp sponge and thoroughly coated the roost bars with original formula Murphy Oil Soap. Which is also known as potassium salts of fatty acids. Which is also an active ingredient in Safer organic bug spray.
Also I placed half inch hardware cloth over all openings to stop wild birds from bringing their mites into the coop.
Prevention is key with mites.
Murphy’s Oil Sosp is actually pretty thick, so when diluted with some water, penetrates the cracks in the wood roosts more thoroughly.Do you use the soap full strength? I would use the Cimexa just to dust the coop cracks because it is not good to breathe in, and can be drying to skin. After all, it is a dessicant. Thanks for your info!
Then you need to treat them directly with permethrin dust asap.I have a mites problem