What are the most important medications, vaccines, and supplies needed for starting a new flock. I want to have a list of things to buy so I am prepared for everything possible when I bring my chicks home.
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I have been on the hunt for organic, GMO free feed that wont cost a fortune to ship. Scratch and peck feed was one I was looking at but I was hoping to find something a little cheaper or even something local to where I can just pick it up.I want to have healthy happy birds more than anything. When I was younger we raised bantams and the only issue we had was scale mites. A good long dip in olive oil and they were cured! I do a lot of research on chickens and it sticks like glue but all the information is conflicting so it's hard to tell what is right for me.I don't know if I should vaccinate, or give medicated feed. It's really hard to make a decision for the well being of an animal and my family. After all, I'm the one eating their eggs! It's been a good 8-9 years since I have had chickens and a lot has changed since then.Medicated feed is unnecessary if you're willing to take the time to add raw garlic to their food. Freshly minced is best, you can feed from hatching onwards. A clove per bird per day is the average but you can use dried raw granulated garlic inbetween boosters of raw garlic too, go over or under that dose and it'll be fine. I soak their grains and mix through herbs, garlic etc and they can pick out more or less depending on their needs.Best wishes.The single greatest thing you can do for them is give them good nutrition, probably, if their immune system is supported it will take care of itself. Too many people balk at the idea of anything more than a dirt-basic and denatured commercial diet for them and scrimp financially when they could afford a little better, then suffer the attendant diseases of poor health and spend so much more in the long run on medications etc, and lose birds, which could have been prevented by giving them a decent diet in the first place. Poor health is cheaper in the short term but far more expensive in the longer term and the damage often takes generations to completely remove from a family line.
Wow! So much info! Haha.What I think is right for me is...
Free range of my yard all day since I'm a stay at home mom.
Organic, non GMO food.
Organic, GMO free, heirloom scraps from my garden.
No vaccines, medications, or contamination.Sometime I don't think it's possible because if I buy chicks from a nursery, I have no idea how good of biology the mother or father had.The more natural the family unit and environment your choice of hatchery allows, the less likely your chooks will be like I've described, but unfortunately such hatcheries are hard to come by. Instincts are rather easily meddled with and bred out via incarceration in unnatural environments, familial unit breakup, etc, and it's a generational problem which will take generations to fully eradicate.Thing about Marek's is that it's so ubiquitous that experts reckon you should consider all birds infected until proven otherwise. It's not some horrific epidemic super-disease, unless you're the sort who practices isolating and biosecurity of a degree that means your birds have never even been exposed to the avian equivalent of the common cold --- coddled immune systems are weak, just like non-exercised muscles, and that's the sort of poultry owner who does everything to avoid Mareks' only to end up losing their entire flock to it. Wild birds can carry it, the wind can carry it, so can clothes, shoes etc... It's a matter of when, not if. Conversely mongrel or less overprotected flocks are highly resistant.Chances are all backyard bred chooks you meet are resistant, though they may be carriers, but that's not a real concern unless you get in non-resistant or susceptible birds, often such as one gets from hatcheries. Mongrels are highly resistant overall for obvious reasons. Hatchery birds, less so, often completely susceptible.You're welcome, glad I could help. Organic gets a bad rap sometimes but massive commercial companies are taking it up with success, it's not even commercially nonviable for large scale enterprises as was once believed, once you've done the research to know how to treat things naturally. No need for doubt, only education. Best wishes with your journey.I'm all about taking the natural route for everything to be healthy. So this really would be easy for me. Plus, I have a huge soft spot for animals so I could never not give my 110% on giving the best care like nature intended for my chickens. I just have never done this all organic chicken raising so I don't know how well it goes. But it sounds promising! Just look at the feed that most people pass off as "healthy". It looks so processed and depleted of nutrients. The scratch and peck feed looked so much more appetizing in comparison. It was amazing. I am so grateful for you taking the time to give me this information. It has truly cleared my mind of doubts. Thank you!![]()