JRNash
Crowing
I wore em. Wore them when I was cutting hogs,butchering sheep,hunting, fishing. Let me rephrase that. I wore them when my cutoff shorts and bare feet would not suffice. Took threats of a beating to get shoes on my feet.lol
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I am ready, but I cannot sleep, I am thinking about my poor chickens.
Always happens, but after they have been gone a few weeks and I start eating them, it is all worth it.
I have a dilemma on the flip flop front. The straps have broke on mine and there are none in the stores right now.
Hey Morrigan, I just fought cocci in my chicks and treated with corid. I wouldn't jump to that especially if you don't want to use medications. However, corid isn't really an antibiotic. It is immune system support more than anything. I think with cx, this sometimes just happens.Question for everyone.
The one chick is still doing poorly; poor appetite, undersized and not as lively as the rest. I'm starting to wonder if it could be cocci. I have some corid and was thinking about dosing her with the syringe to see if that makes a difference. Have any of you treated chicks with corid? Do I have to be worried about residual effects when eventually butchering? I'm pretty much the type that tries to avoid drugs and antibodics if at all possible.
All of the the others look incredibly heathy and lively, and I haven't seen any suspicious droppings.
Oh yeah, if this is the same bird that you thought had an impacted crop it most likely isn't coccidosis. She would be dead by now and so would others most likely. Is the crop really squishy? I don't know if you remember that I massaged a meatie's crop who wasn't doing well and it was because it had eaten a piece of tire rubber. My massaging caused the bird to pass the rubber and she lived.Thanks so much, Jessica, for the good advice. Based on what you said, I don't think it is cocci. The rest of the flock is the most energetic looking group of CX I've ever had. I haven't seen any bloody dropping, aside from what I've come to recognize as small pink strands of shed intestinal lining, which I've had in weeks 3-5 of my last two batches of CX. I was starting to freak out over what I thought was a bright red poo, before I realized I was looking at a squished cherry tomato.![]()
But, what really makes me think it isn't Cocci, is that when I went to give the birds their mid-day fodder, the ailing bird was looking much better. I had intended to isolate it, but I left it in, as it was clearly interested in food and jostling in with the rest of them to eat. From what you said, I wouldn't expect a bird stricken with cocci to linger around a couple of days and then start improving. I'm back to my theory that may the crop was impacted, but it is working itself clear again. I will look at him/her again when I put them away tonight and decide whether I need to isolate it to give it some extra food and TLC. I'm going to put some probiotics in the water tonight, just go give all the chicks a little extra digestive firepower.